[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Primary construction
Original poster: "kayaker" <kayaker-at-sbcglobal-dot-net>
Hello All:-)
Does anyone remmeber the post from last week. Ballasting variacs with
torids. I deleted that post by mistake. Help! Please. Many thanks.
Doug,
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2003 6:58 AM
Subject: Re: Primary construction
> Original poster: Bart Anderson <classi6-at-classictesla-dot-com>
>
> Hi MCP,
>
> Tesla list wrote:
>
> >Original poster: The MCP <ejkeever-at-comcast-dot-net>
> >Oh... Well, there's nothing special about the primary wire either. The
> >connection to the caps is a fat red wire, with 1 or 2 mm of stranded wire
in
> >the middle. The primary coil is around 22 gauge wire, nothing special. It
> >starts getting slightly warm after 20 seconds.
>
> All losses end up as heat, so that is telling you something right there.
> Need to get heavier gauge wire. I personally would go with #18 or larger.
>
> >The topload, I mentioned, is the remainder of wire coming off the
secondary.
> >It's roughly 6 inches long, wound around a 3/8" dowel rod as a form,
coming
> >out to 7 or 8 turns. It seems to give the same results as the original
copper
> >tube topload (1/2" pipe, ~2" diameter)
>
> Ok. I'd try a larger topload. Any old thing would do. It would be nice to
> form a toroid shape if possible, but really, even a pepsi can would
> suffice. If pepsi can, try a primary about 3.2 turns range within a 2.2"
> botttom to top height. Set can upright on top of coil.
>
> >However, although people are telling me this thing is in fact in tune, I
still
> >get absolutely no sparks exceeding 3 inches - ever. Do I need to connect
the
> >bottom of the secondary to a spike hammered into the ground? Do I need to
use
> >a "real" topload?
>
> Couldn't hurt. Also, I've mentioned this in a past post and just noticed
it
> again. Your coupling coefficent is low at 0.065. This will result in
> smaller sparks. If you were to place the primary center to the secondary,
> you "still have a low coefficient" at 0.085. This is the maximum you can
> possibly obtain without winding a primary coil closer to the secondary.
> This is probably the area I would work on along with the topload and
> primary size. I would go to larger primary wire also for the reason that
> #22 will not only heat up, but it will also be prone to pri to sec arcs
> (unwanted arcs) if you were to get too close. Increasing the primary
> diameter would increase the radius of curvature and in so doing, increase
> the voltage of arcover, thus allowing for a decrease in proximity between
> coils (needed to increase the coupling coefficient). Try to get k at least
> to 0.12 and then adjust coupling up or down by raising and lowering the
> primary (or secondary, whichever is easiest for your coil).
>
> As coupling increases, the coil may want to arc out of the top of the
> secondary. At that point, it's time to decrease coupling until it stops. A
> pepsi can won't do well at shielding the top of the secondary, so you may
> not be able to run as high a k as you would like. If you can build a
toroid
> out of something (again, anything will do), the shape of the toroid
> provides excellent sheilding and helps relieve the top terminal stress. At
> this point, you would have to double your coupling to even get to this
point.
>
> All these types of adjustments/modifications are all part of the fun to
> make the coil more efficient at producing longer sparks for a given input.
>
> Take care,
> Bart
>
>
>
> >On Saturday 20 September 2003 09:19 am, Tesla list wrote:
> > > Original poster: Bart Anderson <classi6-at-classictesla-dot-com>
> > >
> > > Hi MCP,
> > >
> > > Nice when you get things like that! But, the #32 is secondary wire. I
was
> > > curious about the primary wire and topload.
> > >
> > > Take care,
> > > Bart
> > >
> > > Tesla list wrote:
> > > >Original poster: The MCP <ejkeever-at-comcast-dot-net>
> > > >Well, the wire I'm using is an interesting story... I got 8 rolls of
#32
> > > > gauge from mpja-dot-com to be used to wind a *load* of small
electromagnets
> > > > in an attempt to build a maglev. I ended up using, um... 2 of them.
So
> > > > I've got about 3 miles of wire, and I wanted to build a tesla coil!
And
> > > > I've *still* got almost all the wire I started with...
> > > >
> > > >Having this huge amount of wire available was one of the things that
made
> > > > me consider making little "play-thing" size tesla coils.
> > > >
> > > >On Friday 19 September 2003 06:47 am, Tesla list wrote:
> > > > > Original poster: Bart Anderson <classi6-at-classictesla-dot-com>
> > > > >
> > > > > Hi MCP,
> > > > >
> > > > > 2 turns sounds about right with a slight topload (maybe a point or
your
> > > > > coiled wire?). Could you do us a favor and give more info as to
the
> > > > > wire type used for the primary? We are still not clear on what
your
> > > > > actually using. The topload would also be much needed data. This
type
> > > > > of data seems to be very limited from coilers (full specs with
center
> > > > > heights).
> > > > >
> > > > > Both John C. and I truly enjoy crosschecking against the programs.
We
> > > > > love doing it or we wouldn't. Your coil is pretty cool to run
through
> >Msnip...........
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>