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My first tesla coil was built in 1967 when I was 14 years old. I was on my own because my parents knew nothing about electronics. It was a small VTTC built according to plans from a July 1964 edition of "Popular Electronics". It used a 6L6 pentode for the oscillator and a 5Y3 as a rectifier. It was called "Lil TC". It actually worked the first time but only put out 1" sparks. I was quite satisfied. There was no top load. I still have it and it still works after 40 years. Steve ----- Original Message ----- From: "Chris Reeland" <chrisreeland@xxxxxxxxx> To: "Tesla Coil Mailing List" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, March 19, 2018 11:20:42 PM Subject: [TCML] Early VTTC memories... Quoting: # 2 VTTC Chris, Dick built his first coil back in '76. Original magazine plans called for old 5514 triode, but he couldn't find one. So he substituted the 811A, with a little higher filament transformer. At first, only got 2" intermittent single brush from top electrode (does not have any toroid on top). Substituted different cap until he found some old Mica Caps (Cornell Dublier I think). This pushed the fingerling out to 6" continuously. He demonstrated this at the Jaycees meeting, but they weren't impressed by the tiny little discharge. The WOW came when he had two volunteers from the audience come up and stand on "dry" wooden chairs. Each was given two burned-out 4-ft fluorescent tubes (they were shown to the crowd as not working in a standard light fixture, but other tubes worked-ok. The volunteers, standing on the chairs, about 8 feet apart and the nearest 6 ft from the VTTC, were instructed to touch the ends of their tubes together (touching the contacts together) and then touch the free near-ends between them together - making a 16-ft long light chair and insulated from the floor. As the tube nearest to the VTTC was turned toward the VTTC, the whole room lit up when all four tubes burst into brightness - no wires attached anywhere. Since this went down the center aisle of the meeting hall, several of the earlier hecklers jumped back in fear of this tiny VTTC. Used a 1500 volt triad-utrad plate transformer into a 6" primary and a 22" coil of close wound magnet wire on 2" pvc pipe. Still have it in the garage, but not been lit up in over 20 years. Laurie When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Tesla digest..." Today's Topics: 1. VTTC tubes (jhowson4) 2. Re: VTTC tubes (Chris Reeland) 3. Re: VTTC MOT question (Chris Reeland) Hi Laurie, You made me smile today :-) The very first vacuum tube coil that my dad, brother, and me built was a complete failure. Never really could get running hardly at all. From what I remember. This was late 70's I think, hard to remember, I was still very young then. I was born in 1971. Gave up on it and it collected dust, some parts went missing. Fairly recently my dad and me we resurrected it, redid several things, with some better parts that we have today. Parts were hard to find then. Stayed pretty true to the original plans. Uses 2, #10 tubes. Little fellas. About 600V input. After some trouble got it running some, yes very weak, maybe 1-1.5 weak arcs.Was not real strong from pictures in plans either. We knew not to expect much, but it was disappointing. Ours was still weaker. I then decided to "modernize" it to what we know today. "Threw" everything out and just reused the primary and secondary. The primary and feedback was wound on a Quaker oatmeal container. Both #18 I think right now. The original secondary on a cardboard tube got lost over time. When we just recently resurrected it my dad ordered a piece of acrylic the same size and he wound it with the closest wire he could find according to the plans. It is supposed to be double cotton covered enamel #30 wire. Closest we could find was single cotton. Just a note could not find the spec wire back then either. I think 2 different tries of something close was tried. Don't know what was last on it since lost. Tried to compensate for the difference, but I think we were way off of course. Even today trying to compensate we were off a bit, but no where as bad. It is a very tall and skinny "candlestick" like most VTTC'S were back then. So I rewired everything, knowing what I know now, switched to a small MOT, just the approx. 2000vac and switched to 2, 811 ( not A) tubes. Speaking of rewiring and changing some components, the original plans had a few "funky" things. Shortening this story up, first light of coil went very well. Did not take too long to tune up. Getting 10.5" out of it. Much better and good enough. This is what I call our "plasma playing fun coil". Not too much original left, but a good running low power coil :-) It is a little weird to look at with the old cotton covered wire. It was white, until coated with clear polyurethane. Now gray. Thanks for your memories and making me remember some of mine. Chris _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla