B
Bill Beaty
Guest
On Tuesday, November 3, 2015 at 10:03:19 AM UTC-8, Piotr Wyderski wrote:
I recall seeing (about 10yrs ago) a ref to math showing that it's not possible; that even the ideal case, mag amp operating point is outside the gain/phase for oscillation. I didn't look up the ref though.
It was in an article on historical development of electronics, claiming that the first oscillators had to wait for vacuum tubes, since even though mag amps existed earlier, oscillators weren't possible. (But even Faraday coulda made one, if he had Nyle Steiner's burned zinc oscillator.)
Also: "impractical" means that hobbyists do it all the time for laughs, while "impossible" means that no hobbyist has succeeded, ever.
Separate topic: is an all-inductors diode possible, using magnet-biased saturable reactors? I recall a Tesla patent claiming this. If real, why all the rotary converters, and why were selenium or copper-oxide rectifiers such a big deal?
You don't need to challenge me, I have exactly the same
experience after nontrivial amount of googling. There's
nothing about it.
I recall seeing (about 10yrs ago) a ref to math showing that it's not possible; that even the ideal case, mag amp operating point is outside the gain/phase for oscillation. I didn't look up the ref though.
It was in an article on historical development of electronics, claiming that the first oscillators had to wait for vacuum tubes, since even though mag amps existed earlier, oscillators weren't possible. (But even Faraday coulda made one, if he had Nyle Steiner's burned zinc oscillator.)
Also: "impractical" means that hobbyists do it all the time for laughs, while "impossible" means that no hobbyist has succeeded, ever.
Separate topic: is an all-inductors diode possible, using magnet-biased saturable reactors? I recall a Tesla patent claiming this. If real, why all the rotary converters, and why were selenium or copper-oxide rectifiers such a big deal?