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Thank you Steve and Gary for the insighht add encouragement! ~Dan Kansas City area On Wed, Feb 21, 2018, 7:04 AM Steve White <steve.white1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Looks pretty good to me. There is nothing wrong with wood as long as it is > used in the proper places such as for structural elements as you have done. > Just don't use it where HV will come into contact with it because it is a > lousy insulator. Use plastics, ceramics, and other types of insulators and > standoffs for the HV elements. As a matter of fact, wood can look as good > as anything if finished properly. My pole pig powered coil uses wood for > the structural parts such as decks and supports. > > For the tank circuit, my coil uses 3/8" copper tubing for everything: > primary and connections. There is no "wire", so to speak. With my > capacitors and pole transformer, JAVATC predicts that my tank circuit puts > out about 450 amps for each discharge (240 bps). Due to the skin effect and > high peak current I wanted to minimize my primary circuit losses, hence the > 3/8" tubing for everything. Since your coil is NST powered, you don't have > to go to that extreme. Just use some decent sized wire, say 12 AWG or > larger. Smaller wire will also work, you will just have more losses > although it may be hard to detect the difference. You will experience more > heating with smaller wire. Just remember, due to the skin effect, the > primary circuit current is only flowing in the outer millimeter or less of > the wire. This is why thicker wire is more desirable even though the vast > majority of the wire is not being used. This is also why copper tubing is > best if you can make use of it. > > For HV wiring in the primary circuit connections, you can use use regular > wire such as THHN slipped inside of clear vinyl tubing. The vinyl tubing > provides a lot of insulation. You can look up the insulation standoff > voltage for various thicknesses. Even with the tubing, I would still not > let any of the HV wire come into contact with anything just as a > precaution. Use standoffs made of insulating material such as ceramic, G10, > etc. You can dispense with the clear plastic tubing if you can maintain > adequate separation between the HV wiring. The vinyl tubing does provide > some additional protection against corona losses. > > For the wiring from the NST to the primary circuit, you can use very small > wire because the current is so low and the skin effect is negligible at 60 > Hz. My pole transformer powered coil uses Belden HV test lead which is only > 22 AWG. I can do this because I am only pulling about 0.3 amps from the > transformer. Since Belden HV test lead is expensive, you can just use > regular wire if you take certain precautions. You can either suspend the > regular wire away from the ground on standoffs or slip it inside some vinyl > tubing for HV insulation. As before, the vinyl tubing will also supply > additional protection against corona loss for regular wire. > > Here is what I did for my HV leads from the transformer to the primary > circuit. As I stated earlier, I use 22 AWG Belden HV test lead rated at 10 > KVAC. Since this is below the 14.4 KV that my transformer puts out, I also > slipped the test lead HV wire inside 1/2" vinyl tubing. These 2 combined > gives me adequate insulation. I then enclosed the HV leads and vinyl tubing > within a sheath of copper braid. I then ground the copper braid to earth. > The copper braid serves 2 purposes. It absorbs any streamer strikes which > may hit the leads and shunts them to ground. It also provides a more even > charge distribution along the HV leads. So with this 3-part HV lead (Belden > test lead, vinyl tubing, copper braid), I am confident to just let my HV > leads just lie on the ground outdoors. This is probably a little extreme > and you don't really have to do this for your NST coil. > > For primary circuit connections, I use mechanical connectors. I use a > combination of store-bought connectors and custom-made connectors that I > made myself. > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Daniel Kunkel" <dankunkel@xxxxxxxxx> > To: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2018 10:34:35 AM > Subject: [TCML] General Construction Advice > > I am getting my second coil online after a 20 year hiatus and would like to > do a decent job with the construction and build quality. I don't have the > money or machine shop or 3D printer to make a beautiful/professional/museum > quality display piece...but I don't want this thing to look like some > amateur junk yard project either! > > So consider a moderately powered coil (15kv @60-120mA NST). Right now my > chassis is made of wood with PVC legs to separate the levels. The primary > coil support is a plastic cutting board. I'd like to keep the amount of > metal in the chassis to a minimum, but it looks like I will be having to > use screws and wood for general stand-offs, wire strain relief, and > support. The primary coil and all wiring is 1/4" copper tubing. > > Here is a pic of current progress...my son helped me attach the casters! > https://imgur.com/jL2ngVc > > Questions: > What do you guys like to do for tank circuit wiring (including connecting > the NST to the tank)? > What kind of wire/tubing? > What kind of insulation? > What kind of electrical/mechanical connections (solder, nut&bolt)? > What kind of insulator and stand-offs do you use? > > Thanks, > ~Dan > Kansas City area > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla > _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla