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Re: Bleeder (fwd)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sat, 20 Oct 2007 17:14:35 EDT
From: Mddeming@xxxxxxx
To: tesla@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Bleeder (fwd)
In a message dated 10/20/07 4:28:30 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
tesla@xxxxxxxxxx writes:
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sat, 20 Oct 2007 12:04:22 -0700
From: Anthony R. Mollner <penny831@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Tesla list <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Bleeder
I'd like to ask a question and find out what the common consensus is
regarding bleeder resistors. What does the group recommend for bleeder
resistors on an MMC bank? 1/2 watt, 5 watt, 1 meg, 10 meg etc.??
Tony
Hi Tony,
:
The Main considerations:
1. Excess heat in the cap bank is your worst enemy.
2. Too long an RC time constant means the MMC can bite you.
Here's how to do a quick calculation, to avoid this:
Let's say you have a 15 kV NST with 15 caps and thus 15 resistors in each
string. Then the drop across each one is 1 kV. Power dissipated is E^2/R so a 1
Megohm resistor would dissipate 1 Watt, and each string would dissipate 15
Watts as heat! If they were 10 Megohm each, then each would dissipate 0.1 Watt
and thus 1.5 Watts for each string (much cooler). Power-wise, 1/4 watt
resistors would be adequate, but their small physical length would lead to dangers
of flash-over, thus a 1/2 watt would be safer. You could, of course, go with
higher on resistance, but that slows down the safe discharge time at
power-down, which is proportional to R x C. Using 5% tolerance resistors will give
you more uniform results than 10% ones. Higher precision would be costly, and
IMO overkill.
Hope this helps,
Matt D.
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