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Re: NST Protection
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To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
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Subject: Re: NST Protection
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From: Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net>
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Date: Mon, 15 May 2000 22:48:06 -0600
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Approved: twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net
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Delivered-To: fixup-tesla-at-pupman-dot-com-at-fixme
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In-Reply-To: <003201bfbedd$cdf37e80$100b65cb-at-Nognilk>
Hi Arthur,
It seems like burning off very roughly 10% of a coil's input power in
the NST filter resistors gives good results. In your case, that is 15000 x
0.030 x 0.10 = 45 watts. So each of your resistors could be 25 watts at 25 /
0.030^2 = 27.8K ohms. "I" would go for 10K ohms each just because... (it's a
little armwaving). So one 25 watt 10K on each leg should do it... That is
only 9 watts per resistor but you need big resistors to hold off the voltage
(maybe you should go to 50 watts with a 15kV NST to bee sure to hold off the
voltage). 10K and 500pF gives a cutoff frequency of 31.8kHz so you should be
cutting the high frequencies well.
So a 10K-ohm 50-watt resistor and a 500pF 10kV cap on each leg to ground is my
best guess...
Cheers,
Terry
At 12:18 PM 05/16/2000 +1000, you wrote:
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> Hi all,
> I'm in the process of building my NST protection for a 15kv/30ma setup.
> I have 2 safety gaps + 2 500pf 30kv caps to ground. I am wondering as to what
> rating to go for in the way of resistors. I have seen a few different setups
> on some of your web sites but most are for larger NST's. Should I go for
> 1.5k/100watt, one on each HV side?
> 1k/50watt,two on each side?
> 5k/50watt,two on each side?
> And could someone please explain what is the correct way to work out the
> right resistors for a particular power supply.
> thanks in advance,
> Arthur.