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Re: Water absorbtion of Gray PVC - sono tube idea
Original poster: "pjj" <tha3rdman-at-zoominternet-dot-net>
Watching discovery the other week ( think it was discovery) they had the
rocket challenge, where the showed how they built the rockets but wrapping
carbon fiber around a sono tube then curing the carbon fiber, and soaking
the whole thing in water to remove the cardboard.
Now at first i though cool a carbon fiber secondary form! but then i though
carbon humm . . .
At any rate why not wrap the mag wire around a sono tube heavily coat as
most do with lacquer or enamel, then remove the card board and wa la AN AIR
CORE.
Just my ramblings
Paul
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2003 9:48 AM
Subject: RE: Water absorbtion of Gray PVC
> Original poster: "David Trimmell" <humanb-at-chaoticuniverse-dot-com>
>
> Hi, I have to agree with Dan here. In all reality a <3Kw coil can easily
> be wound on un-treated PVC with many years (many hours of total run
> times) of use. I will add, though, that a quick rough up with a coarse
> sand paper, and then hitting the coil with a heat gun to get it warm and
> immediately spraying it with a acrylic sealant, doesn't hurt!
>
> Regards,
>
> David Trimmell
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tesla list [mailto:tesla-at-pupman-dot-com]
> Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 5:09 PM
> To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Subject: RE: Water absorbtion of Gray PVC
>
> Original poster: "Mccauley, Daniel H" <daniel.h.mccauley-at-lmco-dot-com>
>
>
> Although your concerns and comments are valid, its really not necessary
> (especially for the mere hobbyist)
> to perform this long process of pre-treating a PVC or other hydroscopic
> forms prior to winding.
>
> Although your intent is good, i feel your comments may actually
> discourage some beginners by making them believe
> they need to go through this seemingly overwhelming pre-treatment
> process. This is especially true considering the
> comments come from the two most experienced tesla coil firms, Resonance
> Research Corporation and KVA Effects. The beginner
> may believe these firm's comments may hold more water so to speak than
> the other people on the group.
>
> The important points I think should be made are the following:
>
> 1. Yes, hydroscopic secondary forms such as PVC will benefit from a
> pretreatment process as described below especially
> in higher power tesla coils (5kW + )
>
> 2. For most small power coils, there is no need to pre-treat the PVC
> secondary. This is based on the experience of many of the members of
> this list including myself. I'm sure if you took a poll, the number of
> people on this last that go through the elaborate process of
> pre-treating a secondary prior to winding will be greatly outweighed by
> the "just wind it" and go people of the list!
>
> Many people on this list will claim sonotube or other cardboard forms
> are the worst possible material for a secondary form
> and should be avoided at all costs. However, the best coils i've ever
> seen were built with cardboard forms.
>
> Dan
>
>
>
> > TCML,
> >
> > I have to back Dr. Rez on this one guys... We use PVC and
> > fiberglass forms.
> > We have accumulated hundreds of hours of run time on a dozen
> > or more PVC
> > coils all above 10kW. We have a really burnt PVC form we keep
> > in the shop as
> > a trophy...
> >
> > Sand, bake*, seal...
> >
> > Sanding breaks up the surface. HV arcs love to travel down
> > smooth surfaces.
> > We use coarse grit and leave the final finish rough. After
> > surface prep and
> > careful and gradual baking with tungsten strip heater, seal
> > the PVC with
> > commercial HV varnish. There's more to the process but those
> > are the basic
> > steps hobbyists should follow.
> >
> > Will you coil work the same if you don't follow these steps:
> > sure! Same
> > applies to O-rings and spray-on foam insulation.
> >
> > * don't over do this step. 20 degrees above ambient for two
> > hours is all
> > that is necessary IMO. If you use heat lamps, spread them
> > out, put them on a
> > variac and don't put them too close. "Hydroscopic" doesn't
> > mean it's full of
> > water and you have to dry it out.
> >
> > Jeff Parisse
> > kVA Effects
> > www.teslacoil-dot-com
> >
> >
> >
> > snip...
> >
> > All PVC is hygroscopic especially when used at high
> > frequencies. It's best
> > to sand interior and exterior, then paint with 3 separate of
> > Glyptal or
> > other HV insulation. Interior sanding is rapidly accomplished
> > by using a
> > sanding "flapper" on a dowel (or other extender) on an electric
> drill.
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>