Thanks skogsgurra
The given proposal is quite simple and just confirm my thinking. It is hard to believe, some times, that solutions can be that easily applied. Sometimes one believes it should be a more hitec solution, but then, one has to remember that solutions should be as simple as possible.
I was thinking in switch cause I wanted to make sure not AC will go thru DC gas starting supply.
My solutions goes like this:
1-To ignite the gas, apply a pulse 2 times the GDT dcbd (direct current break) from a DC-DC high voltage converter whose output is in parallel with an HV capacitor (cap needed to provide GDT the extra boost of energy required to ignite the gas). The converter is a 3 mA xformer where output (0-3000VDC) is proportional to input (0-12VDC). The HV will be connected to GDT using a HV diode in series with a 1M resistor big enough to dissipate power during the GDT ignite.
2-The AC, always present and connected at the same node as the 1M resistor will be ready to conduct current thru the GDT as soon as it ignite the gas.
3-1 donut current sensor will detect current flow thru the GDT, disabling the DC HV supply, just to make sure we disconnect it when not required. The
A secondary solution will be to use a small step up AC transformer from 120VAC to up to 2000 VAC at a very low current. The ballast, as skogsgurra suggest, will keep this xformer isolated from the mains and then, we don't need to switch nothing that all, cause the current always prefer to go the easy way, and it would be the GDT, not the HV AC circuit isolated by the ballast.
skogsgurra would you comment on my text?
Regards
JDC