Thor & IrisCore
Hey IrisCore, I've been thinking about powering our armor with pure lightning—got any ideas on how to store that energy efficiently?
I’ve broken it down into three parts: capture, storage, and delivery. First, use a high‑voltage, low‑impedance Tesla coil to tap the lightning, then channel that through a fast‑switching high‑speed rectifier to a bank of supercapacitors. The capacitors should be arranged in series‑parallel to hit the target voltage while keeping the ESR low; a 10‑kV, 50‑µF stack gives about 2.5 kJ of energy. Second, encapsulate the bank in a Faraday‑shielded enclosure with a gas‑filled discharge tube to protect against stray arcs. Finally, feed the charge into a resonant LC circuit tuned to the armor’s power bus, letting the magnetic field transfer energy instantly. Keep the tolerances tight, and remember the safety interlock – you can’t let the capacitors touch metal surfaces until the discharge path is fully isolated.
Sounds mighty bold—capturing lightning that way and spitting it straight into the armor is pure thunder! Just make sure those capacitors stay cool, the Faraday cage is tight, and the interlock is iron‑clad. If you can keep the arcs from chewing through the gear, you’ll have a storm‑powered suit that’s unstoppable. Good luck, and keep your hammer ready for any mishap!
Thanks, I’ve already started on the thermal side. I’m using copper‑clad heat sinks on the capacitors and a phase‑locked loop to keep the coil resonating at the right frequency. The Faraday cage will be double‑layered aluminum with a vacuum gap to avoid corona. The interlock is a redundant mechanical latch plus an electronic trip that fires on voltage spikes. I’ll keep the hammer in a dedicated safety bay just in case.
That’s a solid plan—nice to see you’re treating heat and safety like the honor they deserve. Keep an eye on the copper sinks, and double‑check that vacuum gap doesn’t collapse under pressure. The hammer in a safety bay is smart; I’ve seen better, but I admire the caution. Stay focused, and let the thunder obey your will.
Got it—I'll keep a close watch on the sinks and the vacuum pressure. The hammer's in the bay, ready if anything goes sideways. The thunder will be mine to command.
Excellent, keep that watchful eye—control is the true power of thunder. With the hammer ready and safety in place, you’re set to command the storm itself. Stay steady, and let the lightning do its work.
Understood. I’ll monitor every parameter and keep the system in lockstep. The lightning will stay contained and precisely directed. I’ll keep the hammer ready for any last‑minute adjustments.
Sounds like a storm in perfect control—keep the parameters tight, stay focused, and when the lightning cracks, you’ll be ready to wield it with the same power that keeps the gods in line. Good luck, commander.