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Re: ASRG blowing diodes



Original poster: "Dr. Resonance" <resonance@xxxxxxxxxx>


Your body is picking up space charge from the coil. Your shoes insulate you from ground making you a capacitor. When you touch something grounded you are discharging your body. Best solution is to move your controls back another 10 feet and this problem will go away.

Dr. Resonance


Original poster: "MIKE HARDY" <MHARDY@xxxxxxxxxx>

I took most of the advice of all the helpfull responses to my problem.
I rebuilt the supply as follows:

- using an 800V, 35 A bridge
- line filters on the line input, and the DC output
- 9,600 , 100V cap on bridge output, bypassed with MMC cap
- Varistor on each output leg to ground
- case grounded to line ground
- 5A fastblow fuse between bridge and xfmr output

It worked fine tonight, with a total runtime of about 1/2 hour, mothing
blew.
However I got some pretty good shocks from the case of the PS. As I
said, it's grounded to line ground. Any ideas here? I don't recall this
before.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, July 07, 2006 6:43 AM
Subject: ASRG blowing diodes


> Original poster: "MIKE HARDY" <MHARDY@xxxxxxxxxx>
>
> I recently put a AR propeller gap on my 6", 4 kVA coil. It performs
> very well, Had some 9 foot ground strikes tonight. I run a 28V, 1.5A,
> 3600 rpm dc motor. Powered by a 6A variac into a 120 to 24 V 5A step
> down tranny into a full bridge rectifier (20 A, 200V). This should
> easilly run this, and it did for many hours. Varying the speed really
> does some interesting things to the character of the streamers! I
> decided to run the 24 line to the motor thru some flexible conduit
> that I grounded to RF ground (in case of streamer strikes). After a
> short time on the 4th, it poped the 2 A slowblow fuse, then stopped
> all together. I found that half the bridge shorted, overheating the
> tranny some. Replaced the bridge, ran it for 3 hours (not hooked to
> the coil) at nominal line voltage, and all was fine. Ran the coil
> again tonight, and after a few minutes it blew again! Oh by the way,
> I didn't ground the flex conduit this time. How do others deal with
> this, is my problem unique?
>
>
>
>