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Re: Resonant Transformer
>
> Hi list,
>
> I have been in a local plant here in Adelaide that used the devices
below
> to heat continuous lengths of pipe to a glowing red hot before coating
with
> a powdered protectant. The field generated around these machines was
> awesome, (three in a row). They each had their own 3 phase supply panel
> and operated at a supply voltage of 9kv/500Kva, each! I remember each
> panel being hooked up to the field coils with cables as thick as a mans
> leg. The first time I stood near one it destroyed my lcd watch and I
swear
> that as you moved your head/shoulders you could 'feel' the field.
You probably could feel it. In a strong magnetic field, movement generates
enough induced voltage/current to be perceptible. A well known side effect
of MRI machines, which have a (typically) 1.5 Tesla field (that's 15000
Gauss).
As there
> was an operator with his head almost inside the machines making sure
> everything was going to plan I can't help thinking about where he is
today!
>
> Best Regards
>
> Robin.
>
> >
> >
> >
> > One could probably cite induction heating as the major
> > industrial application of resonant transformers. The
> > high freq currents are circulated through copper
> > tubing in a spiral in which the sample metal is
> > placed. Within seconds the metal is glowing orange
> > hot. The volume of high freq amperage in the copper
> > tubing is so high that water must be sent through the
> > tubing for cooling. These are mostly all solid state
> > devices today. HDN
> >
> > =====
> > Binary Resonant Systemhttp://www.insidetheweb-dot-com/mbs.cgi/mb124201
> >
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>