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Re: Higher input voltage
Original poster: Ed Phillips <evp-at-pacbell-dot-net>
Tesla list wrote:
>
> Original poster: dhmccauley-at-spacecatlighting-dot-com
>
> Yes, people have gone higher than 15kV. The biggest reason people stick to
> 14.4kV, is availability of pole transformers. There are higher voltage pole
> transformers
> and potential transformers, but higher voltage pole transformers are more
> rare, and most potential transformers of higher voltage almost always have
> 120VAC seconday, not
> 240VAC. So running large coils with potential transformers at high power is
> more difficult with the 120VAC as the current can get very high.
>
> Also, with higher voltage tesla systems, corona leakage and voltage
> stand-off becomes much more an issue. So design can be somewhat more
> trickier.
>
> Dan
>
> > I just had a quick question. I look at a lot of the designs out
> there
> > and I see that most people use NST's up to 15 kV, or lower voltage MOT's,
> > or pole pigs around 15 kV as well. My question is, has anyone ever
> > designed a coil with a larger input voltage than 15 kV? Maybe using
30 or
> > 40 kV or even higher. Is there a reason that most people don't go much
> > higher than 15 kV of input power? Is it due to the availability of such
> > high voltage sources or more of the complexity involved in engineering TC
> > components to withstand the higher voltages? Thanks in advance!
> >
> > Jeremy Gassmann
> > Cincinnati, Oh
Cost primarily; certainly the big commercial stations used higher
voltage. In the "good old spark days" of ham radio most guys were
restricted to a frequency GREATER than 1500 kHz and a single-turn
primary was necessary with the typical 0.01 ufd capacitors in common
use. In the quest for higher power some well-heeled guys did go to 25
kV and there were both capacitors and transformers available
commercially. All this happened just at the end of the spark era
(~1921) and I've never seen any of that stuff in person.
Ed