[Prev][Next][Index][Thread]
Re: Primary Coil Design (may be a duplicate)
-
To: tesla-at-grendel.objinc-dot-com
-
Subject: Re: Primary Coil Design (may be a duplicate)
-
From: "Jeff W. Parisse" <JParisse-at-DDLabs-dot-com>
-
Date: Wed, 27 Mar 1996 10:47:11 -0800
-
>Received: from hondo.cyberverse-dot-com (root-at-hondo.cyberverse-dot-com [204.140.176.2]) by uucp-1.csn-dot-net (8.6.12/8.6.12) with ESMTP id LAA21193 for <tesla-at-grendel.objinc-dot-com>; Wed, 27 Mar 1996 11:51:23 -0700
> I,ve been working with induction heaters in the 200 kHz to 600 kHz
> frequency range for about 5 years now. One common material that is
> easy to heat inductively is graphite. It has a resistivity about 800
> times higher than copper. This means it gets hot a lot faster than
> copper does in the same RF field.
>
> A slug of graphite placed at a spot where you suspect you have an RF
> heating problem would get hot long before any other object would. Stick
> a cheap alcohol thermometer (the kind with the red fuild)in the graphite
> slug and you have a primitve detector. Don't use a mercury thermometer
> since mercury is an electrical conductor. A half inch cube of graphite
> would be about the right size. Drill a hole and epoxy the thermometer in
> place. If you leave the scale on make sure it is plastic and remove any
> metal bits used in its construction.
>
> Note that graphite powder won't couple to the RF fields frequencies normally
> used by TC buildes. I use graphite powder as a thermal insulator for a
> graphite crucuble that I heat inductively up to 1800 degrees centigrade
> (3242 degrees F). The graphite powder just doesn't see the 400 kHz RF.
>
> I work at power levels ranging from a few hundred watts up to 25 kilowatts.
> Below about 1000 watts you have to get within a couple of inches of the
> coils before things start to get hot but then my objective is usually to melt
> anything I'm heating. Also, all my conductors are either 1/4 or 3/8 inch
> water cooled copper tubing, so I never notice them getting hot unless I forget
> to turn on the cooling water. The smoke usually gets my attention.
>
> Hope this helps.
>
> Harry Adams
Harry,
Thanks for such a great tip. I'm sure everybody thumbing through their
junk parts catalogs looking for graphite chunks right now! I know I will
be.
Any ideas on the the loss of Q and the gaining of stray inductance of
lead distances between 12" and 20"? I've got 1500+ straight strand,
0000ga. copper cable for the connections between the capacitors and the
primary coil. Please check out "www.ddlabs-dot-com/tesla.html" to see photos
and renderings of this coil project.
...Jeff