[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Liquid properties
Original poster: Ed Phillips <evp-at-pacbell-dot-net>
Tesla list wrote:
>
> Original poster: dave pierson <davep-at-quik-dot-com>
>
> >Most water is conductive.
> Most AVAILABLE water is conductive.
> and water used around HV gear tends to get 'stuff' in it,
> unless continually 'deionized' or otherwise treated.
>
> However.
>
> Really POure Water (difficult to get, hard to keep pure)
> Is a dandy insulator.
>
> I've mentioned previously the HVDC inverter that
> feeds into the local power grid. To insulate/cool the
> solid state inverter stacks they use 99.9999ifergethowmany%
> Pure Water. +/- 500,000VDC...
>
> best
> dwp
It is common practice to wash the insulators on HC power lines using
water and a hose on a tall pole. Apparently the resistivity of the
moving stream is high enough that it doesn't fry the equipment at the
nozzle end of the spray. It would probably be fairly easy to spray
water into the INSIDE of the pipes to cool them, if you could figure a
way to keep it out of the gap region and give it a place to accumulate
so it didn't short out any of the sections. Worthwhile????????
Ed