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Re: [TCML] Measuring Voltage?



I have an old KV meter from an x-ray machine with a range of 40kv to 140kv dc.
I'm fairly certain NST's output AC current, at least that's what I had always thought... Regardless, reading AC on a DC meter would cause grossly over-rated readings.

On May 23, 2010, at 6:52 AM, "Neal Namowicz" <neal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I wanted to ask if whether or not the primary, or secondary, voltages can be measured with a meter. Here's what I did, and I don't know if my meter is that far off, or if there is something else affecting the readings that I'm not aware of. I have an old KV meter from an x-ray machine with a range of 40kv to 140kv dc. I attached a couple hv diodes to the meter and attached it to the secondary electrodes on a bi-pole coil. The needle was pegged almost immediately when I started to apply power. Then I switched it over to the output on the transformer (9kv, 30ma nst). With the variac at about 1/4 power, the meter was registering 100kv. Not what I expected.

So I have a couple questions here; first, why is the primary voltage reading so high with this meter? I'm thinking that the meter is showing the voltage rise due to resonance, perhaps? If that's the case, is there any way to accurately measure the voltage? I'm actually more interested in knowing secondary output. How can one go about measuring, even "guesstimating" the approximate output on a coil? I'd like to have a somewhat more accurate answer for people when they ask what the voltage is of the arcs. Can my bi-pole coil be putting out more than 140ish kv at such low power? Thanks in advance for your help with this!

Neal N.
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