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Re: [TCML] valve coil problems
Hi Carl,
No problem I must have got mixed up with someone else I saw on the list.
They had built a valve coil with a driver on the grid, and a nifty
arrangement for the grid bias.
I can't remember who it was...
Anyone remember?
Yes I have the data sheet for the valve.
It is roughly as you said, about 200-300 watts dissapation, but that
normally means you need at least twice this power to drive it.
Unless I used a biasing Power supply with it somehow.
Definately a nice way to go if I can get enough info.
I don't have much time for R&D though, because I am up against a time line
on this project.
Kind regards,
Carlos
On Wed, 02 Nov 2011 07:27:47 -0700, Carl Noggle <cn@xxxxx> wrote:
> Hi, Carlos,
>
> The coil I did was in 1956 when I was in high school, and it was very
> small. I can't remember the tube type, it was an 8xx. I got a huge 1
> 1/2 inch corona out of it. I could get a similar arc one third of the
> way up the secondary, but nothing at two thirds. I guess we gotta start
> somewhere. My next coil was with NSTs and got a three foot arc.
>
> I would hope you could make a driver with a half-bridge of FETs. Do you
> have characteristic curves for the control grid? The driver will have
> to take the grid several hundred volts negative for cutoff, and positive
> enough to saturate the plate current. This will require lots of current
> flow from the grid, but from the sketchy data I could find on the net,
> the grid dissipation is only 200 watts, so it should not be too
> difficult to build.
>
> Is there a full data sheet available?
>
> ---Carl
>
>
>> Hi Carl,
>> Thanks, I will try it out.
>>
>> I am definately interested to try the driver idea you mentioned though.
>> Can you suggest a source of info to take some of the R&D out of it?
>>
>> If I remember correctly you did a similar valve coil recently...
>> Do you think it could be scaled up, given that I would need about 500
>> watts of RF power to drive the grid into Class C.
>>
>> Thanks, Carlos
>>
>> On Tue, 01 Nov 2011 12:58:37 -0700, Carl Noggle<cn@xxxxx> wrote:
>>> Hi, Carlos,
>>>
>>> If you have a scope, you could shock-excite the secondary and measure
>>> its resonant frequency. Take it away form the primary, then put a
>>> one-turn coil around the bottom (bottom of the secondary is grounded)
>>> and hook the one-turn coil up to the scope. then flick a 9V battery
>>> across the leads to the one-turn coil. With persistence you should be
>>> able to get a damped oscillation and measure the frequency.
>>>
>>> As a fix, try resonating both the primary and the grid coil at the
>>> operating frequency. Or you could make a series-resonant circuit to
put
>>> across the grid coil--the L should be 2 or 3 times that of the grid
>>> coil, with capacitor to resonate at the third harmonic
>>>
>>> Or for that matter, you could try running it at the higher frequency.
>>>
>>> I still suggest driving the grid with a low-impedance square wave.
Then
>>> you can run in class C. Also, make sure that your screen grid supply
is
>>> well-bypassed.
>>>
>>> Good luck--sounds like a cool coil.
>>>
>>> ---Carl
>>>
>>>
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