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Re: [TCML] PLAYING WITH HIGH-VOLTAGE WIRES, NO BIG DEAL



I wear clothes under the suit but on my face and arms the suit makes direct skin contact with no problem. Normal rubber boots will do nothing as the arcs will go directly through them to ground. I have special shoes with plexiglass heals that light up when the arcs hit me and exit my feet.

Happy and safe coiling,
Terry Leonard (aka Kilovolt)


On 3/11/2015 7:48 AM, wt5y wrote:
What must be worn underneath? Can the metal touch your skin or does there need to be a barrier layer of clothing. Also are rubber boots necessary?


Sent from my Samsung GALAXY S5™, a Cricket 4G LTE smartphone


-------- Original message --------
From: Bert Hickman <bert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date:03/11/2015 08:28 (GMT-06:00)
To: Tesla Coil Mailing List <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc:
Subject: Re: [TCML] PLAYING WITH HIGH-VOLTAGE WIRES, NO BIG DEAL

John,

Many coilers have made their own using pieces of chainmail, bird cages,
and metal screen. A number of professional coilers use custom-made
chainmail shark suits:

http://neptunic.com/products/sharksuits

There are also less-expensive suppliers for folks who are into Medieval
role play that might work:

http://www.historicalclothingrealm.com/armor-chainmail-armor.html
http://www.armorvenue.com/armor-chainmail.html

There are a number of safety precautions that need to be made to insure
redundant electrical interconnection between major pieces of the suit.
And, because individual chainmail links are not bonded together, you can
still get little "nips" and burns when taking hits from larger TC's even
while wearing a chainmail suit. Unless you know exactly what you are
doing, leave this stunt to the pros.

Bert


John Cooper wrote:
who makes the chainmail suits then?

john cooper

-----Original Message----- From: Bert Hickman
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2015 6:10 PM
To: Tesla Coil Mailing List
Subject: Re: [TCML] PLAYING WITH HIGH-VOLTAGE WIRES, NO BIG DEAL

They're closer to cloth gloves. Unlike chain mail suits used by advanced
Tesla Coilers, the suit, gloves, and socks these linemen are wearing are
made from Nomex and microscopic stainless steel fibers. The suits are
quite effective at conducting 50/60 Hz displacement currents at up to
765 kV lines. They reduce the "surprise factor" and discomfort from
corona bursts and small streamers that can unexpectedly issue from
elbows, toes, and fingers while the lineman performs live line
maintenance on Extra High Voltage (EHV) lines. The Russians have used
similar suits to perform live line maintenance on their 1150 kV system.

They are also not as effective as chain mail suits for Tesla Coil
demonstrations. Many years ago, I watched as a volunteer, dressed in one
of these suits, at one of D. C. Cox's Cheesehead Teslathons, became part
of the topload of Cox's Big Bruiser coil. The suit material looks (and
feels) like silvery-gray cloth. He had streamers coming from the fingers
of his gloved hands and from the toes of the conductive socks on his
feet. Although the suit was effective at conducting _some_ of the
streamer current around his body, the volunteer was clearly feeling the
effects of current leaking through the suit and then through his body,
and he complained that his toes were getting burned. Following is some
information about these suits from providers.

http://euclidgarment.com/KVGARD/KVGard.html
http://www.hubbellpowersystems.com/lineman/accessories/suit.asp

Bert

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