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Re: calculating safe primary turn-to-turn distance
Tesla list wrote:
>
> Original poster: "Jim Lux" <jimlux-at-jpl.nasa.gov>
>
> >
> > I just realized that is true for a helical winding, not a
> > pancake coil.! as the inductance/turn tapers off severely
> > towards the inner turns :(
> >
>
> Excellent point.... What would a good approximation be? linear? Square law?
> (inductance should vary with the area, right?) So, more inductance/turn on
> the inside turns.. = more voltage drop
Jim, Malcolm and all,
The incremental inductance/turn increases significantly for the
outermost turns, since the inductance increases as a function of the
radius squared and turns squared.
For example, a 10-turn pancake primary with inner diameter of 10" and a
turn-turn spacing of 0.75" from center-to-center will have approximately
50 uH of total inductance. However, the incremental change in iductance
from turn 1 to 2 only represents about 1% of the total inductance, while
going from turn 9 to 10 contributes almost 20% of the total inductance.
This means that about 20% of the total primary voltage stress will
reside between turn 9 and 10 compared with only 10% if a linear
volts/turn assumption is made - basically twice the voltage stress! As
expected, the innermost turns will see a much lower turn/turn voltage
stress.
Lpri -at- Delta vs % of Tank voltage
Turn Turn (uH) Prev. Turn (uH) Stress to Prev. Turn
1 0.6 0.0 1.2%
2 2.1 1.6 3.1%
3 4.6 2.5 4.9%
4 8.0 3.4 6.7%
5 12.3 4.3 8.6%
6 17.6 5.3 10.6%
7 24.0 6.4 12.7%
8 31.5 7.5 15.0%
9 40.2 8.7 17.4%
10 50.2 10.0 19.9%
Gettin' stressed out in Illinois...
-- Bert --
--
Bert Hickman
Stoneridge Engineering
Email: bert.hickman-at-aquila-dot-com
Web Site: http://www.teslamania-dot-com