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Re: Awesome Quarter Shrinking Capacitors on EBAY
Original poster: "RIAA/MPAA's Worst Nightmare" <mike.marcum-at-zoomtown-dot-com>
Good point. With a few 50kJ tests without blowing anything up except air I
realized I'd have to treat the work coil as a bomb (sounds like one with
air). I thought manhole covers were iron? What if I used higher and higher
voltage in the coil (30kv limit at the moment, but can go much higher with
more caps and a rectified x-ray xformer (125kv), though I'd have to move to
the middle of nowhere). I agree nickels are stubborn (thanks to the weird
nickel alloy), but new (1983+) pennies are totally warped (not just shrunk)
with just 2500J (my first "shrinker") since they are mostly zinc. It seems
old pennies would be a perfect candidate since they are almost pure copper
(if you can remove the tarnish since they are hard to find without it). I
never tried it after the zinc penny goof (turned out to be a blob of
unrecognizable metal).
> Hi all,
>
> One thing that you would also need to consider before trying to
> shrink "manhole covers" is that cast iron is considerably less
> conductive than copper or aluminum and higher conductive me-
> tals are the best candidates for "shrinking/crushing". I've done
> a little quarter shrinking (quite dangerous ballistic energies re-
> leased in the process) and a lot of soda pop can crushing (still
> dangerous but less so than the quarter shrinking. Anyway,
> quarters shrink down to less than dime size in diameter from
> 10 kJ discharge and aluminum soda pop cans are practically
> shreaded. However, nickels and pennies are almost unaffected
> by a 10 kJ discharge (10 kJ is my limit w/ (2) 10 kV, 100 uFD
> caps). Also, the steel cans, like Campbell's soup cans, are
> affected very little from a single 10 kJ discharge but will begin
> to deform after several repeated 10 kJ discharges.
>
> The bottom line is it would probably take a cap bank of mag-
> nitudes similar to the one at:
>
> http://www.hot-streamer-dot-com/adam/60_MJ_cap_bank.jpg
>
> that Adam shared with us to actaully shrink 100 lb. cast
> iron man hole covers. List member Bert Hickman has
> done a lot of research into coin shrinking/ can crushing
> and has an excellent webpage about it at:
>
> http://205.243.100.155/frames/shrinkergallery.html
>
> As matter of safety, I would read and heed Bert's
> safety precautions regarding this as it deals with
> very high pulsed levels of electrical energy that
> can mame and kill from mechanical injury as well
> as the obvious electrocution hazard.
>
> David Rieben
>
>
>