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Am Sat, 26 Nov 2005 22:35:18 -0500 schrieb Phil Hobbs
: Martin wrote: Am Fri, 25 Nov 2005 22:13:38 -0500 schrieb Phil Hobbs : Si Ballenger wrote: I would put a 100 watt lamp in series thereby limiting the current. I would shave the ends down to points so they heated up rapidly. I put them into a hollowed out fire brick and made a cheap furnace. Of course don't look at it; it's like looking at the sun. The current limiter I saw used a glass pie pan with pieces copper metal on each side with salty water as the electrolyte. It would start to steam some when in operation. The furnace was a small clay flower pot with holes in each side with the carbon rods sticking inside until they touched. As a boy, I used an electric teakettle as a ballast for a two-D-cell carbon arc lamp--worked great. An electric arc with just 3V from two D-cells? I thought the arc needs at lesat 20V burning voltage. It ran off 120 V. Parse the sentence as "two D-cell-carbon arc lamp." An earlier poster talked about building AC-powered arc lamps using the carbon rods from dry cells. OK :-) I liked to do that myself, but not from our 230V mains power, but with a transformer, 22V, and 30A short circuit. -- Martin |
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