Gary's point about three-terminal safety gaps makes perfect sense to me when I think about midpoint-grounded NSTs. I'm willing to believe that a three-terminal gap is important in that case. In endpoint-grounded scenarios, such as with lower-voltage NSTs or one-eared pole pigs, it seems like the necessity of a safety gap would depend somewhat on the likelihood of a strike on the *transformer* side of the main gap. In a table-top coil with endpoint-grounded NST integrated into the base, the chances of a strike to the transformer-side primary wiring seems unlikely. And if such a strike *did* happen, the main gap is very close to the transformer. On a larger PT- or pig-powered coil with ten feet of wiring between transformer and coil base (where the main gap might be), strikes to that wiring seem much more likely and potentially damaging. What effect will all that wire and its inductance have on the main gap's ability to act as a safety gap and
prevent the strike from damaging the transformer? That seems like something worth worrying about.
In the end, of course, this is all of little practical importance if even a single scenario can be found where a safety gap is useful. After all, safety gaps are cheap and easy to build, and "best practices" are easier to write down and remember.
Cheers,
Aaron, N7OE
--- On Wed, 6/18/08, bartb <bartb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
From: bartb <bartb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [TCML] Are safety gaps necessary?
To: "Tesla Coil Mailing List" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wednesday, June 18, 2008, 7:26 PM
Thanks Gary for sleeping on it. In the case of a strike I
had not
considered. In the event of a primary strike, there is the
primary to RF
ground and there is the MOV's across the Terry Filter
(and there is the
NST itself). I think the MOV's would save the NST. But,
how short would
the life of the MOV's be? I think maybe it's not
that big a deal if a
Terry Filter is involved. I think I should test it out.
This is one of
those things that requires good old "strike the
primary 1000 times and
see what occurs". Maybe a small on the primary
pointing up at the toroid
would suffice for a lot of primary strikes. My little
4.5" coil is
perfect for this test, but I stuffed it away for the time
being.
That will have to wait until my SISG coil is tested out.
But, I still
think a safety gap may not be necessary regardless of
primary strikes.
Can't prove it and until then I continue to use a
3-terminal safety gap.
Take care,
Bart
Lau, Gary wrote:
I slept on it and it dawned on me this morning. What
happens when a streamer strikes the primary? If one
exists, the 3-terminal safety gap fires, channeling the
streamer's energy safely to RF ground. If one
didn't have a 3-terminal safety gap, the only path for
that streamer energy is through the NST. I think the NST
would be happy that the 3-terminal gap exists!
So I stand by the advice to use a 3-terminal safety
gap.
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