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by throwaway173738 753 days ago
Induce a current magnetically and you don’t need a direct wire connection. As for what to put in the intervening space I will leave that as an exercise.

Induction cooktops are ridiculously efficient at heating

1 comments

Nice idea, but for generating that magnetic field you propose to use ... electric current? ;)
Responding to your question two above:

You've probably seen multiple instances of this in your daily experience. A fuse is a thin conductor between thick electrodes. A light bulb is a very fine conductor between thick electrodes, encapsulated in a vacuum bulb. If you use tungsten electrodes, you can easily melt copper in the manner I've described -- that's how TIG welders work.

Responding to your question about electric current:

Quite simply, use leverage! Take a transformer with multiple (N) windings on the primary and a single winding on the secondary. Putting one (DC) amp through the primary will induce N amps through the secondary. With induction, you can use a low current to induce high current. Or correspondingly, transform low (AC) voltage to high voltage -- this is how high voltage power lines work.

True, but something should be there to close the loop on that not-so-thin brick, and that something will get hot. That picture shows only a single brick, not a loop of bricks so something does not add up.
The picture shows glowing hot electrodes; are you being deliberately obtuse?