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On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 11:56:55 +0200, Paul Keinanen
wrote: On Fri, 25 Nov 2005 12:29:52 -0800, Roy Lewallen wrote: Paul Keinanen wrote: . . . You must have quite slow fuses in 110 V land if you can do a reliable ignition without blowing the fuse. For 230 V operation, I would suggest using a current limiting resistor (such as a large heater) or an inductance (such as fluorescent light ballast) during the ignition. When there is a solid arc, the current limiter can be shorted out. Aren't you in danger of damaging your eyes from the UV emitted from the arc? Certainly. I used arc welding glasses when conducing these experiments. Some trivia: In the silent film era, actors had eye problems due to the UV radiation from arc studio lamps. Most of the usable illumination from the arc lights is actually from the glowing carbon electrodes. "Automatic arc lights" used a solenoid in series with the arc to keep the distance constant between the poles regardless of carbon electrode burnout. I assume that if this is to be used with a AC arc light, both the moving coil as well as the static coil should carry the arc current. Paul OH3LWR We worked with a company that was developing an xray imager, and was buying very expensive electrically conductive glass (gigohms per square sort of range.) They discovered that certain welding glass was identical and about 1/20 the price. John |
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