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0.5*C*V*V vaild? (Was Output Voltages and Voltage/Length)
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To: "'Tesla List'" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
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Subject: 0.5*C*V*V vaild? (Was Output Voltages and Voltage/Length)
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From: Tesla List <tesla-at-stic-dot-net>
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Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 21:13:39 -0600
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Approved: tesla-at-stic-dot-net
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From: Greg Leyh [SMTP:lod-at-pacbell-dot-net]
Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 1998 6:00 AM
To: Tesla List
Subject: Re: 0.5*C*V*V vaild? (Was Output Voltages and Voltage/Length)
Mark S. Rzeszotarski wrote:
> >I have also noticed in PSPICE that the voltage dist
> >along the sec becomes much more linear when a large
> >topload is added.
> >If the voltage dist along the sec is mostly linear,
> >then is it reasonable to treat the sec ckt as lumped
> >elements, and forget the 'antenna theory' treatment?
> >-GL
> Regrettably, I think the answer is yes. The math is really
> interesting but in the long run the system sure acts like a lumped circuit.
> The voltage rise along the secondary is nearly a sine wave from 0 to 90
> degrees along the length of the wire if no toroid is added (typical tube
> coil). With a large toroid on top, the phase angle may only go through 0 -
> 60 degrees or less, and the voltage distribution is much more uniform, since
> sine(theta) is approximately linear for small theta. There is also an
> electrostatic shield effect brought on by the toroid which helps prevent
> breakout from the turns near the top, where potentials are several orders of
> magnitude greater than the breakdown voltage of the insulation.
>
Also in PSPICE I've noticed that when the sec doesn't
have a topload, then the voltage dist _looks_ like a
quarter-sine, but doesn't actually _map_ onto one.
The curve more readily maps onto a y=SQRT(x) function.
Perhaps the non-linear voltage dist observed on TC's is
not a sine at all, but an exponential curve, having more
to do with the primary field dropping off with distance.
-GL