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I went to Lowes and found a greenish 6" pvc? Tube BUT it's only 24" and the only 6" pipe they carry. Also went to Home Depot and bought a 4" standard pvc whitish tube but only 24". They do carry longer 4" pipe but it would need to be cut from a 5' length. Since I'm using 2 15000v 60mA NST I'm thinking I will need to use the 6" pipe but for 1200 turns Ill need 26 gauge for 22" but leaves me with a 3.5:1 ratio. Is this good enough not being at 4:1 or 5:1 ratios - or is it better to just use the more common 4" pipe (2' or buy a taller one) with the 2 NSTs? Thanks, Tim > On Feb 21, 2015, at 3:22 PM, Futuret via Tesla <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Tim, > > The secondary does not need to be as tall as the spark is long. For example > my TT-42 coil has an 18" tall secondary and gives 42" sparks. However sparks > are more likely to arc down from the toroid and strike the primary if the secondary > is too short. I often place a smaller toroid below the main toroid to raise up > the main toroid some to keep sparks away from the primary. The length > of the sparks has a lot to do with the current in the arc and the growth > of sparks over successive gap firings. It seems to me that a high spark > gap break rate coil could tolerate a smaller secondary than a low break > rate coil for a given input power, because the "bang size" (joules per > gap firing) is lower in the high break rate coil. As far as I know no one > has ever really researched this. It was the next thing on my list but > I never got around to it. I usually prefer low break rate though because it can > be more efficient in the sense of producing longer sparks for a given > input power in a properly designed coil. High break rate has it's good > points too though. > > Generally speaking, when the power is increased, the coil is made larger > in proportion. If you use 4 times the power, then the coil should be twice > as large in all proportions including the toroid (assuming the coil was sized > correctly in the first case).... square law sizing concept. As you said, > the wire should generally be somewhat thicker for higher powers. > > The 22 gauge plastic insulation wire will work, but may result in the use > of fewer primary turns, which increases the spark gap losses somewhat > due to the non-linearity of the arc resistance. Plastic insulated wire will > also run at a higher frequency which generally results in shorter sparks > also. Generally the magnet wire is a better choice. Very large coils > may better tolerate the plastic insulated wire however. > > Cheers, > John > > > All, > > If I use both 15kv/60mA NSTs (yes they were identical and phased the same > with my jacobs ladder - bigger flame spark), then the sparks could be 4-5 > feet in length so shouldn't the secondarys also be 4-5 feet tall. All of > the designs I see are about 2 feet for the secondarys but are wider in > diameter like 4" to 6" or more. This doesn't make sense to me. Why go wider > in diameter and not taller in the secondary? I would think you would want > thicker wire like 22 or 20 gauge wire and not 24 or 26 gauge. Also does it > have to be magnet wire. Radio Shack 22 gauge wire has plastic like > insulation. Is that ok? > > Thanks, > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx > http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla