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In my dual 833C VTTC, I use a 12V 30A toroidal transformer which are readily available, for the filaments. With the primary side connected through a small variac, which doesn¹t need to be large as of course the current draw from the 240V primary side isn¹t great to supply the 10V/20A needed on the filaments. I have connections on my coil front panel to connect a DMM to the secondary side of this, and I can then ramp the filaments up slowly to 10V on the secondary side using the small variac. I¹ve been running it this way for more than 7 years, and it works a treat. I¹m getting better than 32² from this coil. An old YouTube video from 2011 is here ?. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Scyz1AFBlzM Cheers, Ian On 28/2/18, 6:25 am, "Tesla on behalf of Steve White" <tesla-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx on behalf of steve.white1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >It would be nice to have a real 10 volt, 10 amp filament transformer. >When I do see them on E-Bay they are rather expensive. The only 2 >advantages of using a modified MOT are that it costs nothing and it is >fairly small. > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Chris Reeland" <chrisreeland@xxxxxxxxx> >To: "Tesla Coil Mailing List" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> >Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2018 10:34:47 AM >Subject: Re: [TCML] Methods for VTTC soft filament startup > >I'm using a nice Stancor, for my filament transformer. > > > >Sent from my LG V20 > >On Feb 27, 2018 10:30 AM, "Chris Reeland" <chrisreeland@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Hi Steve, >> >> I use another variac myself also with an analog AC voltmeter hooked up >> full time. >> I use the variac to vary the voltage for different tubes on my current >>10V >> 10A filament transformer within reason of course when I try different >> various tubes. I also initially check with a good digital voltmeter and >> "calibrate" the analog. >> Yes, running low is not good, in addition to inrush. Running low can >>hurt >> output of coil also besides not being good. >> I like to keep the tube about .2 to .4 max over rated voltage of >>filament >> for load fluctuations, so it will not drop too low. The load from the >> running coil can pull AC 120v line voltage down some, which will drop >>this >> also. So I then adjust the filament voltage. And monitor under different >> load conditions. >> >> You will have to decide the method you want to use. >> >> Me, I test too many different tubes to make a dedicated circuit. >> >> Chris >> >> Sent from my LG V20 >> >> On Feb 27, 2018 8:31 AM, "David" <zipo@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> A small variac to your filament transformer and a ac volt meter to >>> monitor the voltage on the filament. Small 2 amp 115vac variacs aren't >>>that >>> expensive. >>> >>> On 2/26/2018 11:49 PM, Steve White wrote: >>> >>>> I have become recently concerned about maximizing the lifetime of my >>>> VTTC 833A tube. I want to to apply a soft-start to the filament to >>>>reduce >>>> the in-rush current. I measured the in-rush current on the 833A and >>>>it is >>>> over 40 amps! Yikes! It then quickly settles to the required 10 amps >>>>after >>>> the filament heats up. I have been mulling 2 different methods. One >>>>method >>>> involves a thermistor and the other method relies on a fixed resistor >>>>for >>>> pre-heat which is then manually switched out after the pre-heat >>>>period. >>>> >>>> I had a lot of hope for the thermistor method but after trying it, it >>>> didn't work well enough. I placed a 1 ohm initial resistance >>>>thermistor in >>>> series with the 10 volt filament supply which would limit the in-rush >>>> current to 10 amps. This thermistor has a final resistance of 0.06 >>>>ohms. >>>> This doesn't sound like much, but when 10 amps is passing through it, >>>>it >>>> drops the filament voltage by 0.6 volts which resulted in 9.5 volts >>>> supplying my filament which is too low for maximum filament emission. >>>>I >>>> could add another secondary turn to my homemade MOT-based filament >>>> transformer to compensate. I don't like that idea though because it >>>>would >>>> make my filament supply highly dependent on the final resistance of >>>>the >>>> thermistor which has a 20% tolerance. A related idea was to place the >>>> thermistor on the primary (120 volts) side of the filament >>>>transformer. >>>> Unfortunately, because MOTs are so inefficient, my homemade MOT >>>>filament >>>> transformer draws 6.5 amps on the primary side. I would ne >>>> >>> ed >>> >>>> about a 100 ohm initial resistance thermistor capable of handling >>>>6.5 >>>> amps steady state. All of the thermistors that I have found with this >>>>level >>>> of resistance only handle 2 or 3 amps steady state. So I am giving up >>>>on >>>> the thermistor method. >>>> >>>> This brings me to the other method that I will use. I will use a fixed >>>> 150 ohm, 100 watt resistor on the primary (120 volt) side of the >>>>filament >>>> transformer. This will reduce the in-rush current to the filament >>>>below 10 >>>> amps. After the filament has pre-heated, I will then use a switch to >>>>bypass >>>> the resistor to obtain full heating. >>>> >>>> Does anyone have a better method? >>>> >>>> Steve >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> 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 >_______________________________________________ >Tesla mailing list >Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla