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Re: dual 833A VTTC, problems
Original poster: "Dr.Resonance by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <resonance-at-jvlnet-dot-com>
Are you running equalizing parasitic RF chokes on the plates?
Also, you might check with Ed Wingate as he has an excellent dual 833
circuit.
Regards,
Dr. Resonance
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 5:52 PM
Subject: dual 833A VTTC, problems
> Original poster: "Steven Ward by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>"
<srward16-at-hotmail-dot-com>
>
> Hi all,
>
> I have been working on my dual 833A VTTC project for a while now. I just
> recently fired it up again (after blowing the power the first time a month
> ago or so) and keep happening upon the same problem. The tubes are not
> matched, so one gets more red than the other. Rather, one tube is red,
the
> other dark (no redness). I found that i originally had way too much grid
> feedback, so i cut it down quite a bit. This made the sparks grow from
> about 10" to about 20". But even 20" is pathetic for 2 of these tubes :(.
> Basically what is limiting me is that one tube is getting red, and the
> other not, so i cant just let all of the stress fall on one tube. So i
> have 2 ideas that i propose (I think John Freau actually may have told me
> these i ideas, i cant remember). 1, perhaps put a resistor in series from
> the red tube grid to the grid winding. This would reduce the turn on
pulse
> from the grid coil, going into that tube. 2, make a grid coil tap, and
tap
> the red tube at a lesser turn until i get them to go red at ~ the same
> time. This could be tricky, well actually, either way is tricky!
>
> So has anyone ever had this problem? If so what was the solution? Also,
> can anyone think of any other solutions? And which of my proposed
> solutions looks better?
>
> Also, a problem that i thought i would not ever have to worry about. Well
> several small problems. The parts are getting warm. The primary coil
gets
> warm after about 30 sec, the 36A RMS doorknob cap array gets slightly
warm!
> the secondary base gets rather hot, and the discharge point may need to be
> replaced often, if i dont get tungsten :) These arcs are white, hot, and
> thick! So really this coil is becoming a in depth project, when it comes
> to all of the de-bugging(not nearly as bad as the other tube coils!). And
> of course, there is always the possibility of catastrophic faliure when
> running about 2+ KW in a 12"x18" area!
>
> Steve Ward.
>
>
>