Thanks for sharing that @LightBulbFun!
So a series resonant circuit can have higher voltages across the inductor and the capacitor, but when because they are phased differently they add up to the voltage put across them. That makes plenty of sense. But there isn't just a capacitor across the tube or just an inductor, there are both in series, so shouldn't it add up to the supply voltage and no higher? How does it make higher voltage across the tube?
I know it works, and I know higher voltages are produced, I just don't get how. No resource that I have read has explained that.

