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Tesla light(n)ing

Air is an inefficient gas from a lighting point of view, but it can still emit impressive amounts of light when excited with hundreds of kilovolts and more, like in the case shown in the picture above. Here, a 20-kW solid-state Tesla coil was placed on top of a building at the university during an art exhibit. Power fed to the transformer's secondary was modulated at acoustic frequency in order to generate light flashes and arc patterns at the rhythm of music.


Keywords: Miscellaneous

Tesla light(n)ing


Air is an inefficient gas from a lighting point of view, but it can still emit impressive amounts of light when excited with hundreds of kilovolts and more, like in the case shown in the picture above. Here, a 20-kW solid-state Tesla coil was placed on top of a building at the university during an art exhibit. Power fed to the transformer's secondary was modulated at acoustic frequency in order to generate light flashes and arc patterns at the rhythm of music.

IMG_6467.JPG IMG_6448.JPG IMG_9952.JPG IMG_9239.jpg EEG.jpg
File information
Filename:IMG_6467.JPG
Album name:Max / Nightscapes and light art
Keywords:Miscellaneous
Filesize:1294 KiB
Date added:Oct 05, 2025
Dimensions:1500 x 1000 pixels
Displayed:22 times
DateTime Original:2011:11:05 22:45:59
Exposure Time:3/5 sec
FNumber:f/2.8
Flash:No Flash
Focal length:47 mm
ISO:1600
Model:Canon EOS 450D
White Balance:0
URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=991
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Comment 1 to 7 of 7
Page: 1

Tuopeek   [Oct 05, 2025 at 04:04 PM]
A very impressive coil there. A 20kW consumption is considerable for the small light output. It feels like they emit more sound energy than light if you are near one Laughing I have seen coils using 15kW with quite a show. I haven't tried building anything more than 2kW as that's quite scary enough.
Max   [Oct 05, 2025 at 07:08 PM]
A 20 kW Tesla coil many not produce as much light a metal halide lamp system would at a similar power, but it is certainly very enjoyable to watch during operation. That system was built by students years ago, it operates from 3-phase 400 V mains, and features water-cooled IGBTs enabling a continuous operation. That beast is impressive to say the least.
Tuopeek   [Oct 05, 2025 at 09:25 PM]
Great student project, most universities here would probably read the health and safety riot act if a student suggested building one. Water-cooled IGBTs is serious stuff. At these loads, power conditioning is normally a good idea due to the impact on power factor even with 3 phase.
Ria   [Oct 06, 2025 at 02:47 PM]
That safety elf has a lot to answer for Mad
Max   [Oct 07, 2025 at 04:53 AM]
Building that Tesla coil was definitely an initiative from the department staff, the project was given to interested students. Seeing what sometimes happens in the lab, I'm inclined to think that our safety standards are a bit more relaxed than in the UK...
Sammi   [Oct 07, 2025 at 12:25 PM]
@Max, wow, just wow.! Mind Blown
Max   [Oct 11, 2025 at 06:29 AM]
Yeah, I know, it's that cool Wink

Comment 1 to 7 of 7
Page: 1