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Re: Suicidal Secondary--Update
Original poster: "James B by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <zebulan123-at-yahoo-dot-com>
hi Winston
A six inch coil should take 1.5kva fairly easy. in my
experience a three inch coil will take up to 2 kva.
maby i missed this, what is the geometry of the
primary id, od, Angle, ect.
james
--- Tesla list <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com> wrote:
> Original poster: "by way of Terry Fritz
> <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <Esondrmn-at-aol-dot-com>
>
> In a message dated 1/11/02 7:47:35 AM Pacific
> Standard Time, tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> writes:
>
>
> >
> > >
> >
> > Hi everyone.
> > First I should thank all who gave suggestions. I
> just got around to
> > running the coil tonight, and had a chance to put
> a few of your ideas to
> > work. I patched the craters from last week's run
> with 5 min. epoxy, put
> > plexiglass washers around the top half of the
> coil, and rested a 3" dia.
> > toroid on the top washer as an anti-corona ring.
> >
> > These worked to some extent, but not as well as I
> hoped. I got no full
> > secondary arcs, but had many hot racing arcs
> trying to find a way around
> > the washers. There were also arcs running in
> between the washers. I
> > did the coupling calcs. that Terry suggested, and
> found that the highest
> > coupling I achieved was 0.12. It sure looks like
> I'm overdriving the
> > heck out of the coil, but I'm only running at
> 1.5kVA. The bang size is
> > about 5 joules. I tried both toploads (6" by 20"
> and 8" by 22"
> > toroids), with the coil tolerating the smaller one
> best, but with much
> > decrease in spark length. My big topload gave the
> coil trouble, but
> > cranked out 4 1/2 ft. sparks (at the most). This
> run was done in moist
> > air, when the racing arcs are less of a problem.
> Running the coil on a
> > dry day would probably be a disaster.
> >
> > I'm sorry if I'm being a nuisance, but I am really
> at a loss here. I
> > can't see how many of you are able to crank 4 and
> 5 kVA into a 6 inch
> > coil similar to mine (achieving sickeningly large
> sparks in the process
> > :-)) What did I do wrong?
>
>
> -- snip --
>
> Winston,
>
> In my opinion, racing sparks on the secondary are
> caused by either running the
> coil out of tune, overcoupling or just overpowering
> the coil - putting in more
> power than it can take. I use two toroids on both
> of my coils, one right on
> top of the secondary (to prevent sparks from leaving
> from the top windings)
> then another raised up on a hollow cylinder made out
> of aluminum sheeting. The
> upper toroid is larger and most of the discharges
> will leave from the here and
> go up and out, preventing strikes down into the
> primary. My 6" coil produces
> sparks that are more than three times it's winding
> length.
>
> Have you done the math on this coil so you know
> approximately where it should
> be tapped on the primary? Is the best tune point
> within a turn or so from
> there? If so, I would suggest that you are
> overcoupled. Is your primary
> flat? A normal flat primary usually provides
> acceptable coupling with the
> first secondary turn set to be even with the top
> plane of the primary. Lay a
> ruler on the primary and it should be just even with
> the first secondary
> winding. If you have an inclined or saucer shaped
> primary, the secondary will
> need to be raised up possibly an inch or more to
> prevent overcoupling.
>
> Ed Sonderman
>
>
>
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