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Jim, your comment on water vapor and desiccants reminds me of a future project I have in mind to build an oil-insulated transformer. Iâ??m still trying to work out how I can build an enclosure that will prevent water accumulation in the oil. What I should do is periodically degas the oil with a vacuum pump, but Iâ??m a poor college student. On Fri, May 20, 2022 at 2:30 PM Lux, Jim <jim@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 5/20/22 11:08 AM, pupman.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > Hi Tedd, > > > > Cardboard tube works fine as a coilform by itself. As long as you bake > > the moisture out, then seal it you're all set. Clear polyurethane > > varnish from the hardware store works fine and requires no heat curing > > or special processing to use. The amount of water paper can retain is > > rather surprising. There was a capacitor factory here in Chicago that > > you could smell from down the block. It was an odor similar to cheap > > paper towels or wet paper bags and was just moisture being drawn from > > the capacitor elements in vacuum chambers. Nothing went in soggy- it > > was just moisture from the air they were removing from kraft paper and > > cardboard insulation. Paper dielectrics were dried for days and there > > was even one company that dried sections for something like 2 weeks > > (nobody knows why) before impregnation. The cans would be soldered > > shut under oil- that is they actually put large soldering irons into > > the oil tanks and soldered under oil. > > I can guess why the two weeks - some "approved procedure" for a large > customer (i.e. US Government, Phone company, or similar) said "Capacitor > sections shall be baked out at X degrees and no more than Y inHg for no > less than Z hours". > > We do that for spaceflight stuff, because gunk outgasses and then > deposits elsewhere contaminating either the vacuum chamber or your > optical equipment. Silicones are particularly troublesome - they're > really sticky. But we do it for almost everything - coax cables, for > instance, especially anything that might have "wicked" solvent or > something. A bakeout of several days at 60C at <1E-4 Torr would be > typical. > > As you note, paper is remarkably absorbent. And water vapor is quite > "sticky" - if you're doing HV work, it doesn't take much water to > greatly reduce the insulating capacity of the oil - in a big > transformer, they'll have dessicant in the system, and it runs warm, > which helps boil out the water (because sometimes, you can't "seal" the > system - the changes in air pressure would make the enclosure buckle). > > > > > > Transformer manufacturers can bake parts at higher temperatures and > > bake stuff for less than a day, even if it contains paper. Final > > curing takes place in an oven again. These temperatues exceed what > > most plastic parts or any dielectric in a capacitor can withstand. > Exactly - baking out polyethylene at 70C would probably be a mistake. > > > > As for polyester resin as a choice, it sounds excellent. They even use > > it in reconstituted mica capacitors, which are still by far the most > > rugged, highest performing high voltage capacitors available. > > > You might look back in the archives - I believe Electrum, built by Greg > Leyh, used form created by wrapping a cardboard tube with > fiberglass/resin composite. Then pressure washed the cardboard out. I > can't remember if the windings were embedded in the composite, too. > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrum_(sculpture) > > http://www.lod.org/gallery/electrum/electrum.html - If you go to the > pictures page you can see the secondary being wound. > > I think Greg posted some details on how he built it on the list. > > > > > > > > On Thu, 19 May 2022, Tedd Dillard wrote: > > > >> Is there any reason besides difficulty to use a cardboard tube or other > >> material as an arbor and use fiberglass fabric and epoxy Resin to make a > >> form? > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list -- tcml@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe send an email to tcml-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > -- Joshua Thomas My new email address is: joshuafthomas@xxxxxxxxx Please update your information if you have not already done so.