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Re: Top Load Optimizing - Q?
Thanks Terry,
The "air streamers" answers all questions. I
suspected as much. I think it is about time the 50% loss idea is
thrown out forever. I have been saying this for years following my
own measurements and findings. It is not a general rule but applies
to particular loading conditions. It used to be a common wisdom
along with the critical coupling idea which is also non-applicable
to cap discharge coils according to my measurements.
Regards,
Malcolm
On 21 Mar 00, at 17:23, Tesla List wrote:
> Original Poster: Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net>
>
> Hi Malcolm,
>
> All my tests are for streamers going to free air without ground strikes.
> I use plane wave antennas and my fiber-optic probes to gather information
> that I feed to MicroSim models, or I measure currents directly. The main
> links are as follows:
>
> http://www.peakpeak-dot-com/~terryf/tesla/experiments/modact/modact.html
>
> http://www.peakpeak-dot-com/~terryf/tesla/experiments/planant/waveant3.html
>
> http://www.peakpeak-dot-com/~terryf/tesla/misc/R4APROBE.ZIP
>
> users.berter-dot-org seems to still be down :-(
>
> Let me know if you want more info. It is possible that other coils may act
> differently than my own. Mine are both LTR coils that were made with the
> same "mind set" so another mind may make a coil with different properties.
> ;-)) The plane wave antennas are pretty easy to make. The fiber-optic
> probes are now owned by a number of people, and MicroSim modeling is done
> by many. So I am not the only voice on all this and others will hopefully
> report on their observations and thoughts as well!!
>
> I have also done studies were I figure out the power going into a coil and
> account for all the losses as in the following "deja vu" post :-)
>
> http://www.pupman-dot-com/listarchives/1999/June/msg00308.html
>
> I used to think good quenching was the key to everything... but rotary gaps
> tend to be poor quenchers but they offer other power advantages. I "now"
> think that rotary gaps and a primary circuit designed to have low loss is
> the best way to go. The rotary gaps give excellent power throughput and
> allow LTR designs (although static gaps "may" be able to get near the same
> performance). I sort of "gave up" on the first notch quenching in favor of
> highly controlled gap timing, LTR, and low loss primary circuits. "I"
> can't get 80% efficiency. My gaps burn off a lot of heat but the power
> that does get through gets used well.
>
> However... If your arcs are to ground... Then the efficiency would
> improve drastically now that I think about it... But "I" like air
> streamers. :-))
>
> Cheers,
>
> Terry
>
>
>
> At 09:01 AM 03/22/2000 +1200, you wrote:
> >HI Terry,
> > Under what secondary discharge conditions - air or
> >attached? Is your measuring technique detailed somewhere in you
> >webpage? I'd like to have a look if it is please.
> >
> >Regards,
> >Malcolm
> >
> >> Original Poster: Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net>
> >>
> >> At 11:49 AM 03/21/2000 +1200, you wrote:
> snip....
>