Original poster: Greg Leyh <mailto:lod@xxxxxxxxxxx><lod@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi Ken, Scott,
Kelek still has her coil, but no where to run it at the
present. She had built an 'iron maiden' of sorts for it, so that
volunteers could watch the arcs land inches from their face, along
the cage material.
I haven't been able to run my 480V 3PH coil (the 120L50K) since
2003, when the new Navy base commander came along and prohibited
everything that scared him... which was a good many
things. Recently, I've acquired a new industrial site in San
Francisco suitable for operating the 120L50K, with 60ft ceilings and
a dual-bridge overhead gantry crane. I'm currently installing 480V
3PH service there, and hope to be operational in about a
month. Perhaps later this summer we should consider having a No.
Cal. Teslathon there.
-GL
Original poster: "Scott Hanson"
<mailto:huil888@xxxxxxxxxxxx><huil888@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Ken -
The BIG 440/3 phase coil was Greg Leyh's resonant-charged DC coil;
the next biggest coil with the huge copper toroid was built by
Kellek Stevens. I don't know if she is still involved in any Tesla
coil activities, or where her coil is.
Regards,
Scott Hanson
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tesla list"
<mailto:tesla@xxxxxxxxxx><tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <mailto:tesla@xxxxxxxxxx><tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2006 11:57 AM
Subject: Re: Continuously variable primary
Original poster: "K. C. Herrick" <mailto:kchdlh@xxxxxxx><kchdlh@xxxxxxx>
I remember that! Also, the humungeous big coil, that usually lives
there, was fired up. Off of 440, 3 phase; gigantic buzzing,
sinuous arcs; the Navy (who owned the property) found out about it
and...no more No. Cal. Teslathons there, or else imprisonment in
the brig for sure! Also, a very nice large coil that was made by a
young lady; had 3 legs with wheels so it could be moved
around. Whose is the humungeous one?...I've forgotten. And the
young lady?...she's no longer a coiler, I suppose. Pity...
KCH