It is not ohms law; that is the law that relates voltage, resistance and current. What you are thinking about is using a transformer with an incredibly high primary voltage at a low current and a low secondary voltage at a higher current.
The problem is in static electricity the current is sooooo low; such as fractions of a microamp. You might have megavolts but power is voltage multiplied by current and a megavolt multiplied by a microamp is 1 watt.
Of course if you want to get carried away you can use Mother Nature's static electricity, lightening. that comes in megavolts and hundreds, or even thousands, of amps so the wattage can be spectacular. But it doesn't last for very long; fortunately .
__________________ An open mind is a virtue...so long as all the common sense has not leaked out. |