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Re: toob coil
Original poster: "by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <FutureT-at-aol-dot-com>
In a message dated 3/18/02 6:47:37 PM Eastern Standard Time, tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
writes:
>
> . It has two 500 watt triodes in parallel.
James,
what kind of 500 watt triodes are you using? Your efficiency is
pretty good overall.
Secondary is 6
>
> in. PVC wound with 26 in. of #27 and covered with West Marine System Epoxy
> glass. Pulls 23 amps. Max spark is 18-20 in. I suppose that the turns ratio
> was
> too low with 60 turns primary. There is a fine line here. Too few turns and
> the
> impedance of the primary is too low. Too many primary turns and the turns
> ratio
> is too low.
>
> The Tickler coil is easy. Too few turns and the tubes run hot. Too many
> and
> the "grid leak resistor" runs very hot. The tickler coil has to put enough
> voltage on the grid to put the tube into "cut-off".
The tickler coil provides sufficient voltage swing to the grid. The grid
leak network (C and R), creates the negative bias that keeps the
tube biased into the cut-off region.
This is easy to see with a
>
> scope on the tube's grid. Also, you can get an idea from the tube's chart.
> I like playing with the toob coil. The drawback is that you are charged
> with RF. Everything you touch burns you. I end up with lots of little black
> spots all over my fingers.
I never touch any metal when I'm running a tube coil.
Cheers,
John
The uwave PS is quite dangerous. The 4000 volts at
>
> lots of current requires caution. I use absolute caution before touching the
> beast. Generally the "one-handed-rule" applies. Keep one hand in your pocket
> when it's live.
>
> Later,
>
> James
>
>