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I came up with a method of joining the ends of dryer ducting using round discs of wood. First I cut the ends of the ducting as evenly as possible by cutting near a rib, then doing the "cross-over" cut at the spot which will be the "inside curve" of the toroid. The wood discs are cut out to just fit into the dryer duct. The key is to shape the edges of the wood disc with a complex angle which matches the angle of the ducting. On a large toroid, this angling procedure would be less important than on a smaller toroid. When I used this method for a 4" x 12" diameter toroid, I used two discs 3/4" thick and glued them together to make the wood thick enough. I used small nails to nail through the ducting into the wood. The discs were about 4" diameter such that they fitted into the ducting. I placed the nails within the "deeper" sections of the ribbing of the ducting, so the nail heads would not protrude above the ribs. The end result was that the joint was so precise that it was not visible unless one looked very closely. Also the overall shape of the toroid was correct, and not distorted by the joining process. Making the toroid surface smooth using joint compound and aluminum tape is a further refinement of course. John -----Original Message----- From: Timothy Gilmore <tdg8934@xxxxxxxxx> To: Tesla Coil Mailing List <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wed, Apr 1, 2015 8:12 am If dryer ducting is to beused, what are youguys using to join the ends together (justtape)?Thanks,Tim _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla