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Re: I'm a newbie coiler!- apartment coiling



Original poster: "" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

You might want to take a look at my twin parallel magnifier, here's the link:
http://www.tesla-coil.com/Magnifier.htm

Cheers,

John F. Cooper, III
www.tesla-coil.com & .org


Quoting Tesla list <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>:

> Original poster: "S&JY" <youngsters@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> Gerry,
>
> Like you say, the series connected primaries force the secondaries to stay
> about 180 degrees out of phase with each other and at the same frequency.
> Once the secondaries have discharged and are ringing down, they probably do
> exhibit relative phase shift, although there is still some fairly strong
> electrostatic coupling between the two top loads until the voltage dies off.
> But so what if their phase wanders during the last part of their ring-down.
> The next "bang" from the primary jolts them back into the proper phase to
> unleash connecting leaders again.
> --Steve Y.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
> To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2006 10:07 AM
> Subject: Re: I'm a newbie coiler!- apartment coiling
>
>
>  > Original poster: "Gerry  Reynolds" <gerryreynolds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>  >
>  > Hi Steve,
>  >
>  > I would think the two "identical" secondaries would run very close
>  > the the same frequency but once the primary rang down (no more
>  > forcing function), they might drift apart in phase, sometimes "in
>  > phase" and sometimes "out of phase".  Since no two things are exactly
>  > identical, what would keep them phased correctly??
>  >
>  > Gerry R.
>  >
>  > >One good solution to a poor, distant ground is to build a twin TC.  This
> is
>  > >made up of  two identical coils that act as each other's counterpoise.
>  > >Snip<<
>
>
>