It will help to decrease current density at the electrodes, but with more electrode, you also increase current draw and the power supply will supply it.
 The effect difference may be minimal.
The current rating on the power supply is virtually irrelevant as max desirable current draw is well below the max output of the transformer.

PS, That's probably 400 mils or nearly half an amp, not .400 mils.
 Put a 20k resistor in series with one electrode.  That'll help a bunch.

ode


At 11:29 AM 11/22/2006 -0800, you wrote:

My power supply generates 30 volts DC at 0.400 milliamps. If I were to substantially increase the surface area of the electrodes, would that alone serve to decrease the current between the then available electrode area??



Peter




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