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Dave, I notice if I run the variac for a minute or two on my tesla coil, the fuse blows sometimes most likely when I increase the dial past 120 (which may actually be 130 or so vac) the end dial position is 130 which generates a measured 145 vac. I'm assuming the increased voltage from the variac is what's causing the increase in current Thanks, Tim > On Apr 1, 2015, at 3:25 PM, dave pierson <dave_p@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >> If you were blowing a 20A fuse, then the variac was only seeing an >> output of 20A fuse. The idea here is that you can increase the value of >> the fuse beyond what it is recommended, provided you A) do not leave it >> in, and B) you take into account the duty cycle. > >> Of course then you are going to run into the limit of what the breaker >> on that branch circuit is rated for, and breakers tend to not behave >> well after being tripped a lot of times. > >> That having been said, running two 15/60s should only be needing 1800VA, >> or about 15 amps at 120VAC, so it's possible you just have a very >> sensitive variac fuse. You might try a time-delay fuse, as they get >> along better with inductive loads, or just get a higher value fuse (just >> remember to take it out when you are not coiling). > Does the fuse blow after the coils has been operating for > 'a few minutes' or on initial power up? > > thanks > dwp >>> Wow Jon. So perhaps I was using much more than 20 Amps then being drawn >>> from the NSTs. >>> >>> Interesting. >>> >>>> On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 8:01 AM, Jon Danniken <danniken@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>>> On 04/01/2015 05:02 AM, Timothy Gilmore wrote: >>>>> When using my 20A variac, it is listed as 0-130vac but when I measure >>>> with >>>>> a meter it is 0-145vac. I can never bring the voltage past about 120 vac >>>> on >>>>> the dial (which is really about 130vac measured or so) because then the >>>>> variac 20A fuse blows when connected to my 2 15kv 60mA NSTs for my mid >>>>> sized Tesla Coil. During a tesla coil show at my home this week, I was >>>>> running it for about 1 minute increments and blew the fuse 3 times. >>>>> >>>>> Do I have to re-wire my garage outlet and/or circuit breaker for 30A via >>>>> hiring an electrician? or I'm assuming its at 15A now and live with it? >>>> >>>> Hi Timothy, one thing to keep in mind about variacs is that most >>>> domestic versions are rated for continuous duty. This means that a 20A >>>> variac is rated to control 20A 24/7. >>>> >>>> If you want to run them at a higher current than they are rated for, you >>>> can do this, provided that you limit the duty cycle of the variac (the >>>> limiting factor is the amount of heat that builds up). The manufacturers >>>> actually plan for this, and provide a duty cycle chart for the units. >>>> >>>> As an example, here is the duty cycle chart for GE Volt-Pac variacs >>>> (other manufacturer use a similar curve): >>>> >>>> http://i.imgur.com/2fOYa7N.jpg >>>> >>>> As you can see, you can run a variac at double the rated current, >>>> provided that you limit the duration to less than ten minutes. In Tesla >>>> coiling, this usually isn't a problem, because we generally limit the >>>> run time to less than a minute or two. > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx > http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla