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Steve, Since a pole transformer essentially has only two HV outputs (without the third center tapped ground, as with most NSTs), I would figure that a two-pole gap should suffice. Out of curiosity, is your safety gap set so that it occasionally fires during coil operation and assuming that it does occasionally fire, do you have issues with the gap quenching once it does fire? I have personally always had trouble with the formed power arc quenching once the safety gap fires, due to the level of power being processed by a pole pig. That is why I opt for a properly rated MOV distribution arrester to act as my ‘safety gap’. I use a 27 kV rated arrester directly across my RSG and a 21 kV rated one across the HV output bushings of my 14.4 kV pole pig. David Sent from my iPhone > On May 8, 2018, at 11:07 PM, Steve White <steve.white1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > My current pole transformer safety gap is a horn gap and has 2 poles: one pole for each of the 2 HV leads. The other type that I have seen, used mainly on NSTs, uses 3 poles: 2 poles for the HV leads with the 3rd pole being ground located between the 2 HV terminals. Is there any advantage in using one or the other for pole transformers? > > 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