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Re: [TCML] Safely Grounding a Tesla Coil
The BC station can do that in spite of the cost because it increases
the radiated power enough to be worth the money. 120 is extreme but not
unusual even though going beyond maybe 16 doesn't add much. [See
LaPorte's Radio Antenna Engineering.] Purpose is to minimize losses
from current flowing into ground resistance. The elevated counterpoise
is sometimes used when the ground conductivity is poor. It serves a
similar purpose.
For RADIATING systems the ground is even more important at lower
frequencies. However, TC's aren't made as radiating devices and a
simple counterpoise or ground works well enough. I always use a solid
ground on the bottom of the secondary and on any circuit connected to
the HV transformer to try to keep HV away from the secondary if anything
goes wrong.
Ed
"The reference is to grounding systems (radials, primarily) for vertical
antennas. A classic AM radio station ground is 120 radials extending
out as far as the antenna is tall. Not because that's "optimum",
necessarily, but it's enough that adding more radials doesn't improve
the performance of the antenna significantly. A lot less will also work.
Bear in mind that AM radio transmitters at 1 MHz are sort of different
than a tesla coil at 200 kHz. Also, radio transmitting antennas are
designed to radiate, while TCs aren't.
The basic concepts of the ground plane are the same: add conducting
elements to improve the apparent conductivity under the antenna/tesla coil.
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