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Re: Does a "regulating" coil really waste energy?
Original poster: "Dave Larkin by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <teslaman15-at-hotmail-dot-com>
You are quite right. The myth that off axis inductance directly 'wastes'
energy is a hangover from the old days. All it does is reduce k a little,
which may lead to slightly increased spark gap losses beacuse of the longer
'notches'.
More generally on the subject of real time tuning - Greg Leyh used a monster
litz wire tuner on his big coil, and quite a few others have tried other
schemes since, no-one has reported any amazing benefits.
The Tesla coil is actually a fairly low Q device (under sparking
conditions), so these small alterations seem to make little difference.
-Dave-
>From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
>To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
>Subject: Does a "regulating" coil really waste energy?
>Date: Mon, 27 May 2002 14:57:27 -0600
>
>Original poster: "Jolyon Vater Cox by way of Terry Fritz
><twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <jolyon-at-vatercox.freeserve.co.uk>
>
>
>Does a "regulating" coil or off-axis inductor actually waste energy?
>
>If the coil is primarily an inductive reactance isn't the energy
>temporarily
>stored in the magnetic field rather than dissipated? Furthermore, is it
>not
>possible the non-coupled flux could be actually advantageous from the
>voltage-boosting viewpoint, acting as inductor in effectively series with
>the
>secondary capacitance ACROSS the magnetic coupling of the primary and
>secondary
>coils - rather in the same manner that the "leakage"reactance of the HV
>transformer primary is made to resonate with the capacitive reactance of
>the
>tank capacitor in a resonant-charging TC set-up?
>
>
>
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