But I will.    Although it does not meet the parameters of Bob's request,
(ie, I have not tried it myself)
I thought there was a possibility that someone BESIDES Bob, might be
interested. . . . . . . . .

Sparrow

Here is a reprint from the gentleman that provided the instructions.
"What Wiley did at the rip old age of 12 or 13 was hook a sparkplug to the
end of the wire and then run the ground end (where the threads are) into a
12 volt coil off an old A model, but any old coil will do. The bottom
connector of the coil that used to go to the points is hooked to the
positive side of the battery. The negative side of the battery is hooked to
a good earth ground and a 1 to 3 KV capacitor (a few microfarad type like
those found in the horizontal section of a television  chassis) is hooked
from ground back to the wire where the top of the sparkplug is connected.
That's it! Nothing should be touching ground except the ground post of the
battery. Wiley was using about 200 feet of insulated wire and it will
completely charge a 12 volt deep cycle every 2 or 3 days! A thousand feet of
wire will do it a lot quicker but the voltages approach lethal levels.
What is behind this feat is that a very long wire acts like a capacitor and
builds a charge on the wire. When a few thousand volts are reached, it will
discharge by "sparking" across the sparkplug. The sparkplug delivers the
charge to the coil that down-converts it to a few hundred volts and pulses
the battery, kind of "squirting" a charge into it. The weather controls how
much static electricity is in the air. Wind and super cold air seem to
really make you think you can weld with this thing! I hooked a small neon
bulb to a full wave loop on winter night when it was snowing with a high
wind and the bulb burned continuously all night long! The higher you get the
wire of the ground the better. The wire has to be completely insulated. It
doesn't seem to make any difference whether you lay it out in a straight
line or weave it back and forth. Length is the thing here, not size. Old
phone wire, old coax from the cable company, anything that is insulated and
long will do the job. I use my Ham radio antennas, as they are up and long
already. This thing will weld the fillings in your teeth together if you are
not careful with it! "



>"d.linen" wrote:
>
>> Hi Bob,
>>
>> I won't bother you any more.
>>
>> Diane



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