Hi Jeff, all,
You know, I've seen that picture and read the 55 ft.
arc length claim before, but upon closer examination of
the second pic (which makes the +55 ft. spark length
claim) and comparing it to the very next picture below
it (which shows a man standing at the base for size
comparison - obviously a double exposure) and as-
suming that man is not 15 to 18 ft. tall ;^), I just don't
see anything NEAR 55 ft. long in any of those arcs.
MAYBE half that, at best? Am I the only one having
difficulty with 55 ft. length claim from these pictures
alone?
David Rieben
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jeff W. Parisse" <workshop@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Tesla Coil Mailing List" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, May 16, 2009 1:24 PM
Subject: Re: [TCML] Re: The current recordholders?
----- Original Message -----
Along with most folks here I’d like to see photos of 120ft, 78ft or even
55ft arcs, produced by any type of machine. There's reason to hope we
might still see such arcs, within the next ten years.
-GL
Greg and All,
Bill Wysock recorded a 55' arc around 1994. The photo has been published
and on the web for twelve years or more.
http://www.ttr.com/model13.html
Jeff
p.s. I believe input power is an important metric. Otherwise, how is one
to know the type of lines to run?
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