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Author Topic: Selecting the right L/C ratio for tank coils  (Read 5966 times)

NdaClouDzzz

  • Sr. Member
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  • Posts: 305
Re: Selecting the right L/C ratio for tank coils
« Reply #15 on: April 10, 2021, 11:50:02 PM »
Counsel
Mr. Tesla, at that point, what did you mean by electro-magnetic momentum?

Tesla
I mean that you have to have in the circuit, inertia. You have to have a large self-inductance in order that you may accomplish two things: First, a
comparatively low frequency, which will reduce the radiation of the electromagnetic waves to a comparatively small value, and second, a great
resonant effect. That is not possible in an antenna, for instance, of large capacity and small self-inductance. A large capacity and small
self-inductance is the poorest kind of circuit which can be constructed; it gives a very small resonant effect. That was the reason why in my
experiments in Colorado the energies were 1,000 times greater than in the present antennae.


Tesla
I mean this: If you pass a current into a circuit with large self-induction, and no radiation takes place, and you have a low resistance, there is no
possibility of this energy getting out into space; therefore, the impressed impulses accumulate.


Mags

Yes. Hence Joseph Newman's Big Eureka.👍