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| Lamp/Fixture Information | |
| Manufacturer: | Me |
| Physical/Production | |
| Factory Location: | Home |
| Application/Use: | Testing and experimentation |
| File information | |
| Filename: | DSCF0202.JPG |
| Album name: | Max / Misc lamps and lighting |
| Keywords: | Lamps |
| Filesize: | 762 KiB |
| Date added: | 09 Apr 2026 |
| Dimensions: | 1000 x 1500 pixels |
| Displayed: | 32 times |
| DateTime Original: | 2026:03:14 19:52:13 |
| Exposure Time: | 1/4 sec |
| FNumber: | f/4 |
| File Source: | Digital Still Camera |
| Flash: | No Flash |
| Focal length: | 22.3 mm |
| ISO: | 160 |
| Model: | X-E4 |
| Software: | Adobe Photoshop 25.7 (Windows) |
| White Balance: | 0 |
| URL: | https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=1198 |
| Favourites: | Add to Favourites |
@Max I’m interested in the sodium compound you are using. I’m guessing it’s something that’s quite easy to disassociate the sodium ions from, but what would you have to hand? Possibly sodium carbonate or sodium hydroxide. It is likely to require quite a strong field, I am tempted to suspect using you’re RF, like it’s in a microwave oven. However, you have already mentioned capacitive coupled so lower frequency supply. I get the feeling I’m still missing something crucial.
That's what makes it so fascinating.!
AgentHalogen_87, Tuopeek - Good guess about the floating HF HV power supply (~30 kHz to be exact), this is what I use indeed. So, it is correct to say that the lamp runs on two-phase live, but this is not crucial to the way this discharge operates, it could also run properly on a ground/neutral-and-phase circuit.
Tuopeek - I don't exactly know the nature of the sodium compound used here either, it could be oxides, carbonates, etc. All I can say is that this was introduced as a by-product of something else. As for the release mechanism of sodium, something important is missing here indeed.