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Re: Tesla Coil toroid Size (the point of no return)
In a message dated 98-09-11 23:19:17 EDT, you write:
<<
> John F -
> I agree and that would be part of the increment loss that I mentioned.
> How would you determine this "point of no return" when you design your
coils?
> John C. >>
John,
I just use rules of thumb, based on my (and other's) experience for
determining gap robustness and design, for adequate quenching. I
don't have any magic techniques for this. For small TC's I might use
a static gap, and I'd use a rotary for larger coils. Rotaries are much
less likely to hit this quenching *wall*. All my coils are experimental,
so I often test the coils using a number of different gaps anyhow.
Regarding spark-overs and other voltage breakdown conditions of
the primary or secondary coils, I also rely on experience, and
experiment.
BTW, when I sometimes speak of my 42" spark TC, or my 64" spark
TC, etc, these are actually the same coil. I just change the cap size,
toroid, and power input, thereby converting one coil into the other as
needed for various research requirements. A given primary/secondary
coil arrangement can work well over a range of power inputs.
John Freau