Thanks, read through it. That flyback is pretty simple. I've been wanting to build an Edwin Gray power supply for cold electricity. Interestingly enough, I swapped his input step up transformer to a flyback converter. I've been slowly salvaging parts from old CRT monitors for some of this. The coax you mentioned would behave similar to the Gray tube collector. I was thinking of stepping the voltage down from there using part of a Don Smith design.Yes, on page 65 of the February, 1990 copy of Popular Electronics there is an article called "Make a Custom Plasma Display". In that article there is a simple circuit that can be used to create cold electricity (a.k.a.Radiant Energy)with a simple and easy modification.
This magazine can be downloaded here: https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-Poptronics/90s/90/PE-1990-02.pdf
The modification is this: Use a coax cable (I use a 4 foot length of Belden RG-8/u coaxial cable) as output from the flyback transformer. Connect flyback output directly to the center conductor only. The cold electricity will be present on the (shield) braided conductor.
So, to be clear, you only need the flyback circuit part of this project, not the plasma globe. This is a royer circuit that turns off and on fast enough to link up to the aether to create the cold electricity. You can power a neon lamp NE2 or similar underwater with this. In one of my experiments, this circuit powered a resonant cavity that were the same dimensions as stated in the bible for the arc of the covenant. Its output through that cavity was 28,300 hz or cycles per second.
You can run Avramenko's plug from this power.
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From what you mentioned about doing time tests in the AI thread, I'd recommend powering it with cold electricity. Many have used conventional hot electricity and haven't gotten very far. There seems to be something missing (as usual).
Have you tried powering electronic devices from cold electricity? Do they really not care that the cold voltage is higher?