[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Alarm system



Original poster: "robert heidlebaugh" <rheidlebaugh-at-desertgate-dot-com> 

David:,,, Your data is correct for minimum specs, but you should measure the
actual output of your machine. My 5 cap twist handle delivers over 300v and
3 amps. My 50 cap "T" handle machine delivers over 500v and 10 amps peak and
about 5 pulses into the lines. Much more than neaded to fire the circuit
every time. The higher voltage is to asure that when the silver bridge wire
flashes open current is sent across the gap to all the other caps in series.
     Robert   H
-- 


 > From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
 > Date: Sat, 31 Jul 2004 22:44:08 -0600
 > To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
 > Subject: Re: Alarm system
 > Resent-From: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
 > Resent-Date: Sat, 31 Jul 2004 22:45:26 -0600
 >
 > Original poster: "Harold Weiss" <hweiss-at-new.rr-dot-com>
 >
 > Hi Robert,
 >
 > A ten cap machine puts out 45V.  At 2 Ohms per cap and 6.4 Ohms in the
 > firing wire (1 spool = 500' each way of 18ga ), gives about 3.4V per cap at
 > 1.7A (1.5A minimum for any blasting circuit).  At the minimum 1.5 A the
 > voltage drops to 3V.  All caps are connected in series.  Military
 > galvanometers use a .9V battery, and there are warnings in FM 5-25 that any
 > other battery could set one off.   The above system would have approximatly
 > 1120' of wire in it total to act as an antenna with the standard 12' lead
 > lengths on the caps.
 >
 > David E Weiss
 >
 >> Original poster: "robert heidlebaugh" <rheidlebaugh-at-desertgate-dot-com>
 >>
 >> Ah yes ,,,there is no thrill quite like getting your teeth jurked loose
 > with
 >> a 500v 500cap det generator. .. Keep in mind a silver bridge wire in a
 > squib
 >> is a dead short that is vaporized by current from the charged capacitor in
 >> the detonator generator. A 1u capacitor charged up to 500+ volts that is
 >> short circuit dumped into the lines when the "T" handle hits bottem or the
 >> twist handle hits the peg stop . That is real current. Even the high
 > voltage
 >> squibs take 250 volts or more to fire and current of the charged
 > capascitor
 >> to fire the curcuit. A tc coil has lots of voltage to overcone a big gap,
 >> but you still nead current from a toroid, capacitor , or something els to
 >> store the current. Voltage is good, but current dose work.
 >> A micro wave horn neads a tuned stub to inject the Ac voltage into
 > the
 >> horn at the proper frequency to match the horn. Even the high POWER of a
 >> magnetron tube requires a current loupe to inject Ac into a horn.
 >> Robert   H
 >> --
 >>
 >
 >