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Re: Using HV COAX without stripping the shield



Original poster: "D.C. Cox" <resonance@xxxxxxxxxx>



Usually a piece of PVC tubing will not most everything. The PVC has a rather high instataneous breakdown level and the sparks tend to avoid it. It's usually available in 20 ft. lengths from large plumbing supply houses. One could also use aluminum conduit from an electrical supply house and ground it. Either method seems to work well. We lerned this the hard way after he Big Bruiser damage our DC motor control diodes in the remote control console at the Thon.

Dr. Resonance


I have one nagging concern about using unshielded hv cables on a big TC. The
possibility of ground strikes hitting these lines, and for that matter the
SG control lines. Especially without  breakout point. How about throwing
grounded chickenwire or screen over the cables near the coil? Any problem
there?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, November 04, 2005 12:53 PM
Subject: Re: Using HV COAX without stripping the shield


> Original poster: "Kurt Schraner" <k.schraner@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > Hi Gerry, > > please see http://www.pupman.com/listarchives/2005/Oct/msg00610.html > > BTW: the braid of the coax should be shown grounded. Please view in > fixed font. > > Cheers, > > Kurt > > > ----- Original Message ----- From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> > To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Thursday, November 03, 2005 4:40 PM > Subject: Using HV COAX without stripping the shield > > > >Original poster: "Gerry Reynolds" <gerryreynolds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > >Hi All, > > > >It has been mentioned in the group in the past that there can be a > >high frequency resonance when using a coax cable such as RG8U to > >connect the HV from a PIG to the TC where the PIG is remoted from > >the TC. This resonance can cause a higher voltage standing wave on > >the PIG end of the coax. Dr R has suggested stripping the outer > >braid of the coax to minimize the transmission line effect, It > >seems like to me that doing so changes the characteristic impedance > >of the cable and doesn't really eliminate the problem. > > > >I was wondering if anyone has experimented with adding a series RC > >termination to the pig end of the coax to effectively terminate the > >coax. The C could be a string of C's to get adequate HV capabilities > >and the R would be 50ohms if the shield wasn't removed or say 300 > >ohms if the shield was removed. The RC time constant would be set > >to be higher than the resonant frequency of the TC and yet low > >enough to effectively terminate the coax for the high frequencies > >where the coax length would resonant. > > > >Gerry R. > > > > > >