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Re: Tesla Coil Firehazards (Exploding paint cans) (fwd)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 05:22:12 EDT
From: FIFTYGUY@xxxxxxx
To: tesla@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Tesla Coil Firehazards (Exploding paint cans) (fwd)
In a message dated 8/12/07 8:43:09 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
tesla@xxxxxxxxxx writes:
>It's not a temperature of the streamer thing, it's a energy carried
>in the streamer, which would then be transferred to the can, heating
>it up. I would be somewhat suprised if a streamer carried more than
>5% of the coil's input power to whatever it hits. Not only is there a
>fair amount of input energy dissipated in the spark gap and the
>series resistance of the secondary, but there are probably many
>smaller streamers dissipating some power, and, of course, you have to
>keep the streamer hitting the can hot enough to be ionized, which
>takes a fair amount of energy.
>
>
>That said, if one had a small NST powered coil with, say, 450 W
>feeding it (the usual 15kV 30mA), and you got, say, 20 Watts into the
>target, and the target was a low melting alloy solder, it might
>melt. Think of using a soldering iron. Pretty iffy, though...
>you've got that big can sitting there as a heat sink. Heating the
>valve might be more productive as a means of destruction: low thermal
>conductivity, low melting point.
[snip]
>
>An easier test... get a cheap soldering iron in the tens of watts
>range, rig up a jig to hold it in contact with the can.
All good thoughts, Jim, but still comparing apples and oranges on *rate*
of energy transfer. A laser beam can deliver even less energy than a 20 watt
soldering iron would, and still perforate metal. A 5 Joule pulse from a ruby
(etc.) laser would be capable, but that's a fourth of the energy delivered
from the soldering iron in only one second. Energy transfer efficiencies
aside, that can *is* a pretty big heatsink (as you have noted). You guys who also
do laser stuff please correct me... Anybody have a conversion factor between
Joules and "Gillettes"?
This is Tesla coil topical, because I suspect the energy density in a
streamer is pretty high, and we want to know if it's capable of causing damage.
As an aside, a high-voltage transmission line cable can have more energy
density than a laser beam (100 MW/cm^2 vs. 20 MW/cm^2). I imagine natural
lightning has a pretty high energy density.
We could be empirical WRT the question of streamers burning metal. I'll
throw this observation out there: we usually don't burn holes in the sheet
metal or foil that comprises our toroids! So unless the outer end of a hot
streamer has a significantly different cross-sectional area, it's gonna be
incapable of doing damage to a similarly-constructed target.
I *have* seen pic on various sites of CW or high-powered TC's burning
metal electrodes. IIRC, Peter Terrens' Youtube vid showed sparks (of hot metal)
falling from his toroid. I imagine at the 10kVA+ level, the streamer can do
some real localized damage to low-melting-point metals. We know they can burn
wood and plastic, and melt glass bulbs, so I'd say long-term exposure of
metal to a streamer could burn it.
-Phil LaBudde
Center for the Advanced Study of Ballistic Improbabilities
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