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Re: Primary spacing, again
Hi Jon. My experience is that when You get the windings too close it
becomes difficult to attach a tuning device to the tube without shorting
across to the adjacent tubing. I like to space mine with 1/4" dowel rods
as a minimum to make the coil easy to tune. But I think you can get the
windings a bit closer together if you wish, and come up with a
alternative way to affix your tuning connection upon the tube I use a
big alligator clip on my 3/8" tube primary for tuning and it works good.
But sometimes when it is set not quite straight on the tube, I will get
arcing across the tubes even though they are not touching. The thickness
of a wooden tongue depressor about (1/16") seems to be approaching the
air gap limit of electrical breakdown between the windings. But I found
that this can be a bit troublesome having the coil wound this close,
especially under humid conditions. Al.
On Fri, 15 Sep 2000 19:45:24 -0600 "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
writes:
> Original poster: "Jon Rosenstiel" <jonr-at-pacbell-dot-net>
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm in the process of constructing a 4" coil a la John Freau. I'm
> thinking
> about using around 30 turns of 0.125 copper tubing for the pancake
> primary.
> The power supply is a hot-rodded 15kV/ 30mA, (now 42mA), NST. What
> I'm
> wondering is what turn to turn spacing should I use? At first I
> planned on
> 0.250", but it seems to me that with so many turns the turn to turn
> voltage
> wouldn't be that great and I could probably get by with a smaller
> spacing.
> But how much smaller I don't know.
>
> Comments and suggestions welcome,
>
> Jon
>
>
>