So I've already built a high voltage generator capable of producing 25,000 volts of electricity. That thing can make arcs, sparks, corona, and drive a Jacob's Ladder, now what else could I do with it? Store it! Not to mention, this is the next step towards a working Tesla coil. Normal high voltage capacitors tend to be very expensive, but with a little extra time and ingenuity, this dirt cheep alternative can prove to be almost just as good. Each beer bottle has a voltage rating of over 75kV, a capacitance of 3nF and is considered one cell when used in a salt water tank capacitor. My tank capacitor is comprised of 6 cells for a combined capacitance of 18nF.
      
I can not directly connect my capactiors to the HV supply. The capacitors would not even charging. This is because I am using a flyback/ignition coil for the HV source instead of a neon sign transformer (NST). And to make those kinds of transformers work I'm operating it at well over 60 Hz with a 555 timer. In the range of 5 to 15 kHz. So think about the output of the ignition coil, sure it's high voltage, but its also high frequency AC. What is AC? Back and forth, right? I'd be charging and draining the capacitor like a thousand times before it ever has a chance to fire across the spark gap.
      
Solution? Rectify the ignition coil's output with diodes (if used in a Tesla Coil, this would make it a DC Tesla Coil), OR I could use a HV supply with a much lower frequency, like an NST. An NST will still output AC, BUT the frequency is low enough that the caps will at least have a chance to charge up and fire across the spark gap before the voltage swings the other way.
      
Below are some different diode configurations I tried for rectifying my HV current.