Dave H said it all.
Most important: he measured.
350V peaks !! well, that doesn't surprise me.
Yes, they are probably microseconds wide, maybe a millisecond.
Enough to kill a few components.
On a mechanical switch, they don't have energy enough to melt its contacts, of course, but I'm sure each and every little spark causes a minute crater.
Just give them time.
EDIT:
As a side note, Marconi used spark transmitters to communicate across the Atlantic.
The Titanic used one of them too, and ships 350 nautical miles away heard that SOS.
Most important: he measured.
350V peaks !! well, that doesn't surprise me.
Yes, they are probably microseconds wide, maybe a millisecond.
Enough to kill a few components.
On a mechanical switch, they don't have energy enough to melt its contacts, of course, but I'm sure each and every little spark causes a minute crater.
Just give them time.
EDIT:
As a side note, Marconi used spark transmitters to communicate across the Atlantic.
The Titanic used one of them too, and ships 350 nautical miles away heard that SOS.
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