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RE: PDT (Pig) failure modes
Original poster: "Mark W. Stolz by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <mark_w_stolz-at-hotmail-dot-com>
Dave,
A primary strike is probably not going to hurt your pig. Here's a shot of a
nice solid primary hit running ~12kVA. The coil is a 12", the tank that
night was around .187uF.
http://users2.ev1-dot-net/~nmyreality/tesla/AJ010803/primary_strike.jpg
And no safety gap at all. This is just one of many strikes I've seen this
coil take.
Mark Stolz
Houston, TX
>Original poster: "Dave Hartwick by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
><ddhartwick-at-earthlink-dot-net>
>
>David,
>Yes, but what about the surviving the energy from a primary strike, for
>example, which can be huge voltage wise? It is not hard to imagine the the
>insulation used in the core not surviving such voltages. Minor charring may
>be enough to start the failure ball rolling.
>
>My safety gap was not grounded and the system took several primary
>strikes---juicy ones at about 4 kVA from an 8" secondary. Dr. Resonance
>seems to think this would be enough.
>
>BTW, physically, my PDT does not appear to be very old at all. It looks
>just
>like the ones generally in use now, festooning the telephone poles. But who
>knows the actuall condition of the insulating material inside the core. The
>dialectric properties of the paper, for example, could be shot, and still
>physically appear to be normal.
>Dave
>
>
>
>Original poster: "by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
><Tesla729-at-cs-dot-com>
>
>Ken, all,
>
>I realize ANYTHING manmade will eventually wear out and ultimately
>fail, but it seems to me that Dave's pig failed LONG before it should
>have, due to aging! Pigs (PDTs-if you're politically correct:-) are de-
>signed for the most rigorous electrical and environmental operation
>and are designed to operate in these harsh environments for 20 to
>30 years without a hitch. Occasionally there will be a "lemon", but
>the vast majority of them are like a Timex watch - they'll take a lick-
>in' and keep on tickin'. Like Terry says, our "coiling" doesn't really
>even come close to challenging the BIL voltage design envelope of
>these beast :-) They're designed to withstand direct lightning hits
>(with the help of lightning surge arresters) on their primary line
>inputs and the kickbacks of Tesla coiling are quite puny in energy
>compared to to lightning bolt-to-line hits ;-) BTW, lightning surge
>arresters make good substitutes for safety gaps.
>
>Coiling in Memphis,
>David Rieben