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Re: physically large coils
Original poster: "Hooper, Christopher AZ" <christopher.az.hooper@xxxxxxxxx>
48kwatt DRSSTC with SCR control is on its way! Plan to have a fit
inside my 6 x 10 trailer for thons.
No more xformers for me!
Cheers,
Christopher robin
-----Original Message-----
From: Tesla list <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: tesla@xxxxxxxxxx <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wed Mar 08 18:07:05 2006
Subject: Re: physically large coils
Original poster: Jim Lux <jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
At 11:07 AM 3/8/2006, you wrote:
>Original poster: Mddeming@xxxxxxx
>Hi All,
>
> Reminds me of a quest they have down here in the hills of
> W.Va.: How to build a 2-story mobile home with portable, in-ground
> pool that can be easily moved from place to place overnight
> whenever the lot rent comes due.;-))))
> I don't think that there's any way around the fact that large,
> heavy objects require large, heavy moving equipment.
Indeed, but the challenge is in making a big TC not heavy.
> A 6" coil with RSG, control console, NST farm, toroids, spare
> parts, and tools will pretty well max out something the size of a
> capped Ford Ranger and be loadable by one person. With a 12"-16"
> 10-20kVA pig, RSG, and a safe control console,
pshaw.. "safe" ... I was just going to grab wires with my bare hands
to turn it on and off.
But realistically, the control console is just some switches and a
couple of relays.
I think the only heavy part that is non-trivially overcome-able is
the HV transformer and current control.
But, switch mode power supplies might be the answer. The challenge
would be in finding something off-the-shelf and cheap that could be
adapted (otherwise, you might as well get involved in building a big SSTC)
> you're probably looking at a deuce & a half truck or a custom
> built trailer and 2 or more people to load. Bigger than that, and
> you're talking fork lift, side boom, and flatbed or enclosed
> commercial trailer, or a platoon of double hernias. :^((