@coatduck if you keep watching however, I take the casing of the candle off. Yet the bolts still arc across the flame. I believe that TeravoltOrg had successfully given the reason for why this happens. Thank you for the comment anyway.
@Nanovirus5995 sorry, didn't notice that. glad you caught it, I have a bad habit of not watching videos to the end
I am not disputing that the flame conducts electricity, however, I was simply pointing out that metal(I think its aluminum?) conducts it more. also, nice marx generator, what caps and resistors did you use, and what is your input voltage?
I could watch this for hours 0.0 so freakin cool. Lovely voice too btw :)
27smoot 1 week ago
the casing of the tea light is metal, its going through the casing most of the time
coatduck 6 months ago
@coatduck if you keep watching however, I take the casing of the candle off. Yet the bolts still arc across the flame. I believe that TeravoltOrg had successfully given the reason for why this happens. Thank you for the comment anyway.
Nanovirus5995 6 months ago
Comment removed
coatduck 6 months ago
@Nanovirus5995 sorry, didn't notice that. glad you caught it, I have a bad habit of not watching videos to the end
I am not disputing that the flame conducts electricity, however, I was simply pointing out that metal(I think its aluminum?) conducts it more. also, nice marx generator, what caps and resistors did you use, and what is your input voltage?
coatduck 6 months ago
Candle flames conduct electricity. They are full of ions.
TeravoltOrg 1 year ago