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Re:[TCML] Black polyethylene pipe ok for secondary?
Greg Peters wrote:
Agreed. That was one thing I was afraid of. I have seen a black poly
pipe secondary fail in Tesla Coil duty but that was a coil producing
over 3x the winding length so I figured it might have happened with any
form. I'm cautious enough to avoid it altogether though I suspect it
can't be any worse than cardboard!
On another note, I was thinking that filling the inside of the secondary
with expanding polyurethane foam (cheap, comes in a spray can) might be
a good way to prevent internal arcing and may allow us to make ground
terminals with a bolt through the form. I find making the ground and
toroid terminal the hardest part of secondary construction. It would be
nice if we could just use a nice solid bolt through the side! Surely
filling the form with polyurethane foam would make the inside of the
form less conductive than the outside, in which case the coil could
always be expected to fail externally first right?! Any thoughts?
---
Foam isn't a particularly good HV insulator, it's sometimes worse than
open air.
What happens is that the field doesn't distribute evenly. THink of a
thin section through the foam, and what happens to the electric field.
It's like a series combination of big and small capacitors (big where
the dielectric is the plastic, small where the dielectric is air). The
voltage distributes according to the inverse of the capacitance; that
is, if you have 100V across a 1 uF and a 9uF capacitor in series, you'll
have 90V on the 1uF and 10V on the 9uF.
So what happens is that you have a bunch of high and low fields in
series, and the field in the air bubbles is *higher* that it would have
been if it was just air with no plastic, so it breaks down sooner.
Where foam *might* help is once the spark starts propagating, because
there's "stuff" in the way of the propagating spark in air.
The other thing where putting something in air helps is when it
increases the surface length between the two electrodes (e.g. grooves or
fins on an insulator), but there, the idea is to get the along the
surface length to be 3-4 times the "through the air in a straight line
length", so that the insulator doesn't breakdown along the surface.
If you've ever taken your NST and put a couple wires on a sheet of
insulator (glass/plastic) you'll note that the distance over which it
breaks down is much greater than when the two wires are in free air. A
15kV NST will typically jump a 1/4" gap in air without much trouble, and
seeing it breakdown over a 1" gap across plastic isn't unusual.
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