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Neon lamps as surge arrestors

Hi I was reading in a different forum that someone had a vintage power supply which had  2 neons 1 from each side of the centre tapped secondary  which normally just glowed but at switch off they would flash bright blue because of the inductive kick from the transformer and from the smoothing choke the idea being to protect the rectifiers  by clamping the spike. Also the PSU was designed to run motor generator sets feeding them 28 volts DC obviously motors are also a bit inductive so guess these nons helped with that too.. My question is do you think there's any mileage in using neons across the mains to act as surge arrestors? I'm thinking they could be a cheap option instead of  MOVs etc  what do you think? Am I miles out here or on to something?
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  • I have used neons to clamp lower voltage lines than mains -  antennas and so on, but . you need to be aware they are not really  up to dissipating much energy , probably only a joule or so before they shatter. The other problem is that once they enter the impact ionization arc state- the blue flash is the onset of an arc, they have a very low voltage drop, typically less than 10V,  and the current must be interrupted for several milliseconds before they extinguish, and go back to the glow discharge that drops 70-90 V..

    Normal signal neons run off the mains rely on a current limiting resistor of perhaps 100k ohms to limit the current to ~ 1mA to stay in the orange light glow discharge

    state.

    There are ceramic bodied gas discharge tubes with higher power ratings , but again they go near-short circuit when lit, so need a bit more thought and cannot be just left across the mains without additional ADS measures.
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  • I have used neons to clamp lower voltage lines than mains -  antennas and so on, but . you need to be aware they are not really  up to dissipating much energy , probably only a joule or so before they shatter. The other problem is that once they enter the impact ionization arc state- the blue flash is the onset of an arc, they have a very low voltage drop, typically less than 10V,  and the current must be interrupted for several milliseconds before they extinguish, and go back to the glow discharge that drops 70-90 V..

    Normal signal neons run off the mains rely on a current limiting resistor of perhaps 100k ohms to limit the current to ~ 1mA to stay in the orange light glow discharge

    state.

    There are ceramic bodied gas discharge tubes with higher power ratings , but again they go near-short circuit when lit, so need a bit more thought and cannot be just left across the mains without additional ADS measures.
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