Hi Dean,

"Dean T. Miller" wrote:

> Hi Bob,
>
> What this has to do with CS is a puzzle to me.  :)

 Has to do with making CS in the wild, during bad situations. Gives us
another option.

>
>
>
> Getting power from the ground takes a couple of straight runs of wire
> about 1/2 mile long.
>
> It's easier to recharge from the air.
>
> It's fairly simple.  You need a mesh "antenna" attached to an
> automotive spark coil through a spark plug.  The low voltage side of
> the spark coil runs through a diode rectifier, into a battery (fancy
> setups use a voltage regulator so the battery won't get over-charged).
>
> The antenna is usually some kind of screening (yup, chicken wire
> works) that is supported by two tall poles -- say 30 feet (Channel
> Master makes some collapsible poles for TV antennas that work well).
> Fasten the screening between the two poles, keeping the bottom at
> least 10 feet off the ground for safety.  Of course, use insulators on
> the support wires/ropes between the poles and the screening (electric
> fence insulators work well).  Make sure the screen can conduct
> electricity throughout.
>
> Make a plastic plate (acrylic seems best) with a hole in it large
> enough to fit a spark plug -- the plug doesn't have to screw into the
> plate, just go through it.  Also, mount an automotive spark coil on
> this plate. Mount the plate (making sure it's insulated from the pole)
> about 10 feet above the ground on one of the poles.  Install a spark
> plug into the hole using 2 washers and 1 nut.
>
> Strip about 2 inches of insulation from a wire and wrap it around the
> spark plug threads between the 2 washers.  Connect the other end of
> the wire to the screen.   Connect a non-resistive spark plug wire from
> the tip of the spark plug to the high-voltage cap of the spark coil.
>
> Run a wire from the low voltage terminal of the spark coil down to a
> recifier diode, and from the diode to the positive battery terminal.
> Run a wire from the negative battery terminal to a copper pole stuck
> into the ground (buried 6 to 8 feet).
>
> You won't get gobs of power, but you'll get some.  During dry, windy
> days you could get several hundred watt-hours of power (with really
> big screens you could get kilowatts).
>
> -- Dean -- from (almost) Duh Moines  (CDP, KB0ZDF)
>
> --

 Interesting static collector.  Sounds like you have actually built one.
Exactly what did you power with it ?. What was your voltage and current
flow?. What were your atmospheric conditions?. Where did you do this at
(geographical area)?. 6W5383 (I'm an old codger).

 Bless You     Bob Lee

--
oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
  [email protected]



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