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Re: PC board cap is a no-go
Original poster: "Bert Hickman by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <bert.hickman-at-aquila-dot-net>
Shad,
What size tank cap are you shooting for and what will your planned plate
voltage be?
-- Bert --
--
Bert Hickman
Stoneridge Engineering
Coins Shrunk Electromagnetically!
http://www.teslamania-dot-com
Tesla list wrote:
>
> Original poster: "Sundog by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
<sundog-at-timeship-dot-net>
>
> Hi All,
>
> I was looking at etching the copper from PC boards and using them as
> elements of a flat stacked cap for the GU10A tube coil. I *finally* got
> the chance today to set up a test. 12kv NST, fullwave rectifier, and a
> variac on the NST input.
>
> It failed pretty miserably. There was a lot of corona losses at the
> edges of the plates, even at ~11kvDC. Puncture resistance was okay, but
> the sustained corona quickly weakened the dielectric enough for it to punch
> through after about 2 minutes of sitting at ~13kv DC (that'd be pretty hard
> on the GU10A).
>
> Yes, I could stack 2 plates together in series to halve the voltage
> across each one, but that would immediately quadruple the space needed, and
> also the cost. Where before I'd need about 30 plates, I'd now need
> 120. At around $4 each, it's now real expen$ive.
>
> So I need an alternate plan here guys. I'm up the creek without a
> suitable cap. MMC's are out of the question. Too much capacitance, not
> enough current handling ability. transmitting caps are hard to find and
> expensive, and I don't know of any home-made cap that will take the raw
> current (much higher sustained current than a TC can deliver). I get the
> feeling LDPE and aluminum flashing caps would get too hot and disentegrate
> internally, leading to a spectacular and probably fatal (to the tube)
> failure. I'm open to suggestions.
>
> Thanks all!
>
> Shad Henderson
> G3-1203