spark-plug gap - significado y definición. Qué es spark-plug gap
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Qué (quién) es spark-plug gap - definición

DEVICE
Spark gap transmitter; Spark transmitter; Rotary gap; Sparkgap transmitter; Spark-Gap Transmitter; Quenched-spark transmitter
  • Transmitter ''(bottom)'' and receiver ''(top)'' of the first "syntonic" radio system, from Lodge's 1897 patent<ref name="Patent11575"/>
  • Hertz's first oscillator: a pair of one meter copper wires with a 7.5 mm spark gap between them, ending in 30 cm zinc spheres. When 20,000 volt pulses from an induction coil ''(not shown)'' was applied, it produced waves at a [[frequency]] of roughly 50 MHz.
  • Circuit of Hertz's spark oscillator and receiver
  • Inductively coupled spark transmitter. ''C2'' is not an actual capacitor but represents the capacitance between the antenna ''A'' and ground.
  • Circuit of Poldhu transmitter.<ref name="Fleming"/> Fleming's curious dual spark gap design was not used in subsequent transmitters.
  • Circuit of Marconi's monopole transmitter and all other transmitters prior to 1897.
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  • Low-power inductively coupled spark-gap transmitter on display in Electric Museum, [[Frastanz]], Austria. The spark gap is inside the box with the transparent cover at top center.
  • Telefunken 100&nbsp;kW transoceanic quenched spark transmitter at [[Nauen Transmitter Station]], [[Nauen]], Germany was the most powerful radio transmitter in the world when it was built in 1911
  • Pictorial diagram of a simple spark-gap transmitter from a 1917 boy's hobby book, showing examples of the early electronic components used. It is typical of the low-power transmitters homebuilt by thousands of amateurs during this period to explore the exciting new technology of radio.

Spark plug         
  • Spark plug gauge
  • Longer insulator tip (in gray) for the "hotter" spark plug
DEVICE THAT GENERATES SPARKS IN INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES
Spark-plug; Sparkplugs; Spark plugs; Sparking plug; Sparking Plugs; Spark Plug; Sparkplug; Sparking plugs
A spark plug (sometimes, in British English, a sparking plug, and, colloquially, a plug) is a device for delivering electric current from an ignition system to the combustion chamber of a spark-ignition engine to ignite the compressed fuel/air mixture by an electric spark, while containing combustion pressure within the engine. A spark plug has a metal threaded shell, electrically isolated from a central electrode by a ceramic insulator.
Spark plug         
  • Spark plug gauge
  • Longer insulator tip (in gray) for the "hotter" spark plug
DEVICE THAT GENERATES SPARKS IN INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES
Spark-plug; Sparkplugs; Spark plugs; Sparking plug; Sparking Plugs; Spark Plug; Sparkplug; Sparking plugs
·add. ·- In internal-combustion engines with electric ignition, a plug, screwed into the cylinder head, having through it an insulated wire which is connected with the induction coil or magneto circuit on the outside, and forms, with another terminal on the base of the plug, a spark gap inside the cylinder.
spark gap         
  • The switch contacts on a multimeter acting as a PCB spark gap.
GAP BETWEEN TWO ELECTRODES THAT IS USED FOR GENERATING SPARKS
Triggered spark gap; Spark gaps
¦ noun a space between electrical terminals across which a transient discharge passes.

Wikipedia

Spark-gap transmitter

A spark-gap transmitter is an obsolete type of radio transmitter which generates radio waves by means of an electric spark. Spark-gap transmitters were the first type of radio transmitter, and were the main type used during the wireless telegraphy or "spark" era, the first three decades of radio, from 1887 to the end of World War I. German physicist Heinrich Hertz built the first experimental spark-gap transmitters in 1887, with which he proved the existence of radio waves and studied their properties.

A fundamental limitation of spark-gap transmitters is that they generate a series of brief transient pulses of radio waves called damped waves; they are unable to produce the continuous waves used to carry audio (sound) in modern AM or FM radio transmission. So spark-gap transmitters could not transmit audio, and instead transmitted information by radiotelegraphy; the operator switched the transmitter on and off with a telegraph key, creating pulses of radio waves to spell out text messages in Morse code.

The first practical spark gap transmitters and receivers for radiotelegraphy communication were developed by Guglielmo Marconi around 1896. One of the first uses for spark-gap transmitters was on ships, to communicate with shore and broadcast a distress call if the ship was sinking. They played a crucial role in maritime rescues such as the 1912 RMS Titanic disaster. After World War I, vacuum tube transmitters were developed, which were less expensive and produced continuous waves which had a greater range, produced less interference, and could also carry audio, making spark transmitters obsolete by 1920. The radio signals produced by spark-gap transmitters are electrically "noisy"; they have a wide bandwidth, creating radio frequency interference (RFI) that can disrupt other radio transmissions. This type of radio emission has been prohibited by international law since 1934.