[Home][2015 Index]
Yes. I remember "The Boy Electrician" (1913 and 1948 versions) and that's where I got the idea about Tesla Coils and related high voltage experiments. However, I always thought since the book was so old that it would be difficult as a teen building some of the projects in the book requiring skills in woodworking, metals, etc. that was more inclined to being made in a factory or shop setting than at home. Great book though! I have read it many times growing up. I found them online for download under public domain: http://danielwebb.us/projects/pd_tech_books/ Tim On Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 8:00 PM, mddeming--- via Tesla <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi Tim, > > Welcome to the addiction. For me, it was the 1948 Edition of "The Boy > Electrician" by Alfred Morgan which I discovered in 1954 (and still have). > I believe there is no substitute for first trying to make as many > components yourself as possible for the experience and pride, even if it is > not the most modern and efficient way to proceed. > > Matt D. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Timothy Gilmore <tdg8934@xxxxxxxxx> > To: tesla <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Tue, Feb 10, 2015 7:38 pm > Subject: [TCML] Building a medium sized Tesla Coil > > > All - This is my first post: > > When I was 15 (35 years ago) I saw in a magazine (Radio and Electronics?) > and article about how to build a Tesla Coil. It used sheets of glass and > aluminum foil for the capacitor and explained the details. I thought this > was amazing! Initially I was able to locate a Model T Ford spark coil for > $5 as the HV transformer. I used an old Lionel train set variable voltage > adjustment (like a variac might be now) transformer used for speed control > on the train - as AC input into the Model T Ford spark coil. I found some > wood in my dad's garage for the base and used a PVC pipe and 8 guage > primary wire and 28 gauge spooled secondary wire I had gotten from a > friend. I pieced everything together and turned it on and figured out how > to tap the primary turns (on wooden dowel rods as per the magazine > instructions). I saw 4-5" sparks and held a florescent tube nearby. I was > hooked! > > I brought it into school to show my shop teacher. He told me about a city > wide Industrial Arts show and contest and thought I should re-build my > tesla coil and have it properly stained and got everything looking really > sharp looking for the contest. I was able to locate a more powerful neon > sign transformer of perhaps 15 or 30 mA. We fired it up and tuned it and > got 9-12" sparks out the single wire of the top of the primary. I did not > know about toroids/spheres for capacitance back then. I entered the contest > and won first place for the research and development category. > > From this point forward I read as much as I could about Tesla from the > library and later bought many books about him and his work. I wrote a term > paper the following year about Tesla. I don't know what became of my > original Tesla coils but I have been reading online the last couple of > months about various tesla coils and modern ones and the latest > advancements with calculation software. > > I found about about the GFI issue and was lucky to find on eBay a "France" > neon sign transformer 15kV 60mA used (no indication on the label about GFI > or UL 2161) for $45 + $58 shipping which is a bargain for some of the > prices I've seen online at over $300. I ordered plans online for $14 for > several tesla coil designs and I'm hoping to get 3-4' sparks using the 15kV > 60mA neon sign transformer. I remember hand winding my secondary coil as a > kid and I should be able to find a 4" PVC 26 gauge 22" long secondary on > Ebay. I also bought some HV 15kV connection wire (25') and a primary copper > tubing frame holder to make it look nice and evenly space the primary turns > - online. I will not use sheets of glass or make my own HV caps but will > purchase MMCs and make a bank of them with 10M resistors. I hope to spread > out the cost over the next few months and have a finished medium sized > Tesla Coil by late spring. Getting Excited! - Tim > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx > http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla > > > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx > http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla > _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla