ground (much) higher than AV plug
Hi all,
I have watched slayer007's interesting video
YouTube - 1.5v Exiter
with the current draw further diminishing at the end of the video, once he lights the many leds on an Avramenko plug.
I am experimenting with a totally different (kind of transformer) setup. Yet my setup shows this same effect as in slayer007's video. (And also excites the environment a little - much less than a proper SEC - yet detectable with a LED-probe on an AV-plug.)
Now I have found the following:
if I connect an AV-plug to my setup (as slayer007 does in his video) and if I use a neon instead of the LED(s) on it, the AV-plug sometimes may not have enough energy to light that neon. But when I ground one of the branches of the plug, then the neon will light as in the attached photo, where the black clip connected to the anode branch of the plug goes to ground.
In such cases the ground has the higher (Voltage-) potential so that the plug "is the minus".
Does anybody have encountered that same effect?
Hi all,
I have watched slayer007's interesting video
YouTube - 1.5v Exiter
with the current draw further diminishing at the end of the video, once he lights the many leds on an Avramenko plug.
I am experimenting with a totally different (kind of transformer) setup. Yet my setup shows this same effect as in slayer007's video. (And also excites the environment a little - much less than a proper SEC - yet detectable with a LED-probe on an AV-plug.)
Now I have found the following:
if I connect an AV-plug to my setup (as slayer007 does in his video) and if I use a neon instead of the LED(s) on it, the AV-plug sometimes may not have enough energy to light that neon. But when I ground one of the branches of the plug, then the neon will light as in the attached photo, where the black clip connected to the anode branch of the plug goes to ground.
In such cases the ground has the higher (Voltage-) potential so that the plug "is the minus".
Does anybody have encountered that same effect?
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