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Re: High voltage standing waves with a magnetron?
Original poster: "mercurus2000" <mercurus2000-at-cox-dot-net>
Hmm, correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the voltage determine how much
force the elecrons are flung from the at? And the current determines how
many electrons are flung off?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Saturday, January 31, 2004 8:14 PM
Subject: Re: High voltage standing waves with a magnetron?
> Original poster: BunnyKiller <bunikllr-at-bellsouth-dot-net>
>
> IIRC... you need to have the voltage and amperage at a specific value
for
> the magnetron to work...the filament runs on AC 3 or so volts at umteen
> amps ( so no hot spots will develope in any one position on the filament
> coil) The filament needs to be glowing orange/yellow for electron emmision
> to occur
>
> the amperage of the hi volt side needs to be enuf to force the electron
> emitted from the filament to flow in the desired direction along with the
> magnet structure to get them to spin around the baffle system and get the
> "elecrton cloud" to resonate in the baffle system. If the baffle system
is
> changed in size you get a different frequency....
> this may be good or bad depending on which bipolor molecule you are trying
> to "resonate". ( I think h2o resonates "spins" best at 2.4GHz)
>
> as far as getting RF radation to go into a resonate rise situation is
> something that I havent read about or understand.... I have been under the
> impression that once a source of RF has been emitted from its
> "antenna" its on it own and cant be resonated any higher than the
> present emitted power...
>
>
> Scot D
>
>
> Tesla list wrote:
>
> >Original poster: "mercurus2000" <mercurus2000-at-cox-dot-net>
> >I was just curious if anyone experimented with high voltage standing
waves
> >from a magnetron and trying to create a resonant rise from them? My idea
> >for a safe experiment, would be taking a small microwave oven magnetron,
> >power the filament at that standard 3 volts ac or dc, and applying
> >EXTREMELY small power HV DC current to the entire device, like 4000 volts
> >at a half a milliamp, to keep the power output at about 2 watts rather
> >than the normal 1KW, would a circuit like this work? Or would the heating
> >current to the filament have to be reduced as well?
> >
> >
>
>
>
>