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  2. Build your own Tesla coil with this cool DIY kit

    www.aol.com/build-own-tesla-coil-cool-100000854.html

    TL;DR: Relive the science fair with the DIY Tesla Music Coil Kit, on sale for $399.99 as of Nov. 7. Now you can bring what you see in your head to life with the DIY Tesla Music Coil Kit.

  3. Tesla coil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_coil

    Singing Tesla coil or musical Tesla coil: This is not a separate type of excitation, but a modification to the solid state primary circuit to create a Tesla coil which can be played like a musical instrument, with its high-voltage discharges reproducing simple musical tones. The drive voltage pulses applied to the primary are modulated at an ...

  4. Resonant inductive coupling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resonant_inductive_coupling

    [11] [12] [13] In 1897 he patented a device [14] called the high-voltage, resonant transformer or "Tesla coil." Transferring electrical energy from the primary coil to the secondary coil by resonant induction, a Tesla coil is capable of producing very high voltages at high frequency. The improved design allowed for the safe production and ...

  5. Singing Tesla coil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singing_Tesla_coil

    Video of the Museum of Science (Boston)'s coil. The singing Tesla coil, sometimes called a zeusaphone, thoramin or musical lightning, is a form of plasma speaker. It is a variety of a solid state Tesla coil that has been modified to produce musical tones by modulating its spark output. The resulting pitch is a low fidelity square wave like ...

  6. Henry Leroy Transtrom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Leroy_Transtrom

    Henry Leroy Transtrom (1885–1951) was an American inventor and showman who worked with high voltage electricity.His book, Electricity at High Pressures and Frequencies, [1] (1913) is still used as a guide for constructing homemade Tesla coils.

  7. Bifilar coil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bifilar_coil

    German physicist Wilhelm Eduard Weber made use of the bifilar coil in his 1848 electrodynamometer. [3] Large examples were used in inventor Daniel McFarland Cook's 1871 "Electro-Magnetic Battery" [4] and Nikola Tesla's high frequency power experiments at the end of the 1800s. [5]

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  9. Insulated-gate bipolar transistor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulated-gate_bipolar...

    The on-state forward voltage drop in IGBTs behaves very differently from power MOSFETS. The MOSFET voltage drop can be modeled as a resistance, with the voltage drop proportional to current. By contrast, the IGBT has a diode-like voltage drop (typically of the order of 2V) increasing only with the log of the current.