Both Eric and Dave's base frequencies are really low. Not sure what harmonics they have since that could vary between designs. I believe they both said they checked emissions and it seems fine.
My design on the other hand is the complete opposite as its pulse width will be adjustable as low as 500 nanosec and the base frequency will be adjustable to as low as 1.5 usec. I use a single turn 3' hollow Al tube, which has very low inductance, which means di/dt is extremely high. The signal is very square, which all equates to a lot of noise. See attacked image for computer spectrum generation. Top of image is signal. Middle of image is a blow up of spectrum, 4X. Bottom of image is full spectrum. In the 4X the red line = 100 KHz, yellow = 200 KHz, green = 300 KHz, purple = 400 KHz. As you can see, 100 KHz is low even though it's the base frequency. Peak is at ~ 900 KHz.
Paul
My design on the other hand is the complete opposite as its pulse width will be adjustable as low as 500 nanosec and the base frequency will be adjustable to as low as 1.5 usec. I use a single turn 3' hollow Al tube, which has very low inductance, which means di/dt is extremely high. The signal is very square, which all equates to a lot of noise. See attacked image for computer spectrum generation. Top of image is signal. Middle of image is a blow up of spectrum, 4X. Bottom of image is full spectrum. In the 4X the red line = 100 KHz, yellow = 200 KHz, green = 300 KHz, purple = 400 KHz. As you can see, 100 KHz is low even though it's the base frequency. Peak is at ~ 900 KHz.
Paul
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