Back. White Board Bottom of Page
Temporary storage page for later sorting. Updated: March 18, 2009 20:57
Tesla List Discussions, et. al.
Ammeter Configurations Toroids Effect on Q of Secondary *
Critical Rise Time * Quarter Wavelength Frequency *
De-Ionized Water Resonant Voltage
Depleted Uranium Spark Gap Saturable Reactors as Ballast *
Slide Choke * Setting Up a Pole Pig's Wiring *
Designing High-Gain Triple Resonance Tesla-Xfrs * Theory of LTR *
DRSSTC Discussions Toroid Discussions
Frequency Splitting Variational Methods *
Magnifier Calc's & Related Watts
Measuring Fres What Determines HV Output in a TC?
Measuring Streamer Characteristics What Do I Do? *
Official Air Breakdown Voltage Doc Windings vs Diameter *
Overtones & Velocity Factors * Wire Length *
Phase Control Yokogawa Power Primer
* Recently added
Unsorted Material Below (but interesting, nonetheless)
The Below are transcribed from one of my white boards down in the lab, mostly topics of interest
Nematic Elastomers
Nutating Gearbox
Lichanura Trivirgota Roseotusea myrio lepis?
Dolph's AC-43 in place of Glyptal?
Sea-Level psi = 14.7
Fulcanelli
www.mrwizardsstudios.com
cde 942 series caps, 0.15mF, 2kV
Temp Conversion: Enter a number in either field, then click on the other field.
******
There are 48 astrological signs within the ecliptic and 88 signs in total.
******
AC and DC meter circuits are basically the same except an AC circuit has a
low loss meter bridge using 1N34 or 1N914 diodes. Robert H.
******
I have posted my proposal of the Electric propulsion by
the Tesla coil on my web page
http://www.msu.edu/~liuxiaod. I am preparing to do it.
Comments and suggestions welcome. Thanks.
regards, Xiaodong Liu.
******
Windows & browser compatible math fonts from MIT: http://web.mit.edu/is/topics/webpublishing/mathml/index.html
******
Date : Wed, 21 Jul 2004 17:49:37 -0600
Subject :
http://www.emachineshop.com/.
A friend just referred me to this on-line
machine shop. You download a 5 meg CAD program, design whatever part you
wish fabricated and then submit it for a quote. If you accept their price
you can place an order for the thing to be created. RSG rotors, hubs and
so on come to mind. Daniel.
Date : Thu, 15 Jul 2004 16:32:22 -0600. Subject : Re: machining copper
Original poster: Jim L.
I just received an interesting and useful piece of machining lore. When
machining copper (which is difficult to machine): Sharp tools,
Fast speeds, Condensed milk as a lubricant <<< this was the new thing. Apparently it's
the "miracle lube" for copper cutting.
Think about it... a colloidal dispersion of a high temperature oil (butter fat)
in a water base. Stinks, goes sour, etc., but apparently it's the "miracle
lube" for copper cutting. This came from a guy in our propulsion dept. who has to machine all
sorts of exotic things (Inconel, Hastelloy, Kovar, you name it).
Involving yourself in the discharge
Wow! Cool! I think that it is Dr. Speake who passed this stunt on to Dean Ortner. A wonderful bit of history there! Of course, nobody go trying this stuff at home. Speake and Ortner have done this thousands of times and there are a ton of really important details that keep one from dying. They have also been injured on occasion but not seriously. But, it is always fun to watch someone "else" doing it ;-)). Cheers, Terry
Bill Wysock and Lowell Beazley did this many, many times. I think the max input power was 5, maybe 8 kVA, 90 to 120kHZ, I'll get the exact specs from Bill and will correct those approximate numbers. John C.
Q. Does anyone know what the average capacitance of the human body it? I'm getting 200pf from different web pages on the net.
A. For the FAA average weight human
male, 170 lbs, its 165 pF. Roughly .97 pF/lb with a human. Slightly different
value for aliens.
You can also do an interesting experiment with a TC, to calculate or measure the
capacitance exactly.
Feed your coil with a signal generator, 2 turns around the very lowest part of
the sec, and observe the res freq with an o-scope. Record this freq. Next,
stand your victim (I mean partner) on a plastic or glass insulated stand
elevated at least 48 inches from the floor, have them touch the sec toroid, and
record this freq.
Subtract the two frequencies. Knowing the inductance of your sec coil,
substituting this value into the freq equation you can solve for C --- the value
of capacitance of your test object/subject.
This is also a great way to measure the cap of balls, spheres, toroids, etc of
unknown capacitance. Dr. Resonance.
Stripping Litz wire for soldering
Try methylene chloride, it takes a while depending on coating thickness but it eventually dissolves the enamel to leave bare, bright shiny copper.
6-13-04. I gave paint stripper another try, this time allowing the wire to be submerged for about a day and a half. In my previous attempt, I waited only about 5 minutes. This time after the long soak, the enamel washed right off the wire under a high pressure water rinse, and solder took to the wire like a duck to water. The paint stripper did contain methylene chloride among other nasty things. Thanks for the tip! Gary L.
6-20-04. Tesla List. I received your Litz sample in the mail today and easily soldered one end using the "copper tubing solder pot" and propane torch method that I believe I've described on the list before. No paint thinner, no aspirin, no strain, just a bit of rosin core solder. Thanks for sending the sample. As I suspected, you just weren't getting the solder hot enough to melt the enamel. Regards, Ed Wingate RATCB
**********************
In the past I made a translucent box, a small opening on top in which a small brass outlet tube (from ballpen filling). Box partly filled with 96%-spirit. Also inside, a multi-gap spark bridge. Also in box, submerged, a wire wound resistor to heat the spirit. Prior to operation of the Wien bridge, the spirit was heated to the point that no air escaped from the exhaust but spirit fume, and than ignite it (sniff first!..). During operation of the bridge, heating was not needed. Operation of spark bridge was much better, because the copper disks hardly oxidized any more. The exhaust fume was ignited because I did not want free spirit fumes around and also the length of the flame is a good indicator of the internally generated heat. However, this set-up was used with two paralleled ignition coils as HV source and must be adapted to higher powers. I made this about 45 years ago. In the snipped correspondence, no mention was made of the amounts of carbon soot that were generated in the spark chamber. The chamber had to be cleaned from time to time and if it was opened before it had cooled down enough, the man who opened the little door got his face full with soot from the small explosion. It was a trick played upon newcomers...! Regards, Willem B.
Electrum: Greg did complete Electrum and installed it in New Zealand. There are plenty of pics of Electrum on Greg's site at: http://www.lod.org/electrum/electrumpics.html and http://www.lod.org/electrum/nzinstall.html
Initial primary to secondary diameters for the design stage: The best coils I ever built all had helical primaries. It is important to make the diameter at least 2x that of the secondary and perhaps larger while getting the turn-turn spacing as small as possible. Malcolm.
ULF Receiver For The Study Of Schumann Resonance http://www.iihr.uiowa.edu/projects/schumann/Index.html
Nitrogen/Air blast nozzles?
Back To Index
Back To Tesla Tips ------------------ Bertan makes multi-kVDC power supplies that have very accurate current
readout (fractions of a micro amp stuff).
http://www.bertan.com/ You might want to look around their site or
call an engineer there. The newer stuff is really nice. I have three of their
supplies and they work great. They know a lot, so ask them for sure. There
newer stuff is supposed to have far less output C which is nice when that 500kV
shorts out ----------------- The Inca program can model anything with axial symmetry, as a stack of
toroids, for example. For a secondary coil, you still have to split it into a
series of cylinders and specify different voltages for them. Not many
sections are needed for a good sim. The Inca program is at:
http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/programs. Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz. LTR Calcs Q. 5-1-4 TL. What exactly is the LTR value of a cap? I understand
for a static gap system it is pi/2 * the resonant cap size, but why. Also why
should we use it? Q. 4/30/2004, How do you compute the LTR cap value for a given transformer with a static gap? SRSG? I see that the Geek Group website has a table for a given range of NST sizes but what I'm after is the formula(s) to determine the recommended LTR cap value for a given transformer. I know how to determine the
resonate cap value for a given neon but how do I arrive at LTR? I realize that the very nature of this thread suggests that the optimum LTR
value might be up in the air. Daniel. A. Terry F. Hi Daniel, Let me see if I can remember ;-)).
Originally, LTR values were computed with long hard MicroSim simulations:
Resistors across each cap in an mmc, and why
1. 6-8-4. Has everyone forgotten
the inexpensive VR37 resistors previously offered by Phillips and now
distributed by Vishay (BC Components)? These are advertised as "High Ohmic -
High Voltage Resistors", and the 1/2 Watt series is rated for 3500 VDC, 2500 VRMS. These resistors consist of a metal oxide film deposited on a ceramic core,
covered by a hard baked lacquer finish. Although they cost more than the
dirt-cheap garden-variety carbon film or carbon-composition resistors, the last
time I bought the VR37's they were only 12 or 15 cents each. Given the cost and
effort required to assemble a clean looking and conservatively-rated MMC, why
use anything less?
2. 6-7-4. Terry Fritz did some
testing a few years ago on the 10Meg, 1/2W, carbon comp resistors (the 10MH-ND
from Digikey) and showed that they didn't break down for at least a few kV. As
I recall the resistor suffered from thermal issues long before voltage issues
;) The results are buried in the pupman archives, but Terry may be able to post
a link in shorter order than I....
3. 6-7-4. I use 3 bleed
resistors per cap. Others use one standard one and get away with it.
Others use none at all. I am not sure what the right approach is. I
don't know anyone who is using the HV ones in view of the cost. Peter T.
4. 6-7-4. The main problem is no
single relay can discharge a MMC capacitor string without bleed resistors
installed. Any DC charge held within a series capacitor string can not be
discharged without a DC path. Though AC is applied to the capacitors the last
cycle of the AC leaves a + or - DC charge on the series string. Robert H.
5. Personally, I don't even
want to bother with them. John C.
Skin Effect
At 08:19 AM 5/21/2004 -0600, you wrote:
The standard equation for skin depth
July 19, 2004. Original poster: Anthony. Hi
guy I was wondering some body could tell how calculate discharge current of a
capacitor?
Answer 1. July 19, 2004.
It depends on the load you are discharging into. An inductor, like a TC primary
circuit, tends to act as a resistance which in effect slows down the current as
it flows in the inductor and builds up the magnetic field. The peak discharge
current is limited by this effective resistance (and reactance).
(Hummm... An inductor produces a
current that is proportional to the integral of the voltage. If a constant
voltage is applied over an
(Ok. Antonio C.)
Dr. R. Follow-up to Antonio's comments, inserted above.
I think we are both saying the same thing in a
slightly different way. With impulse generators, as an example, resistance
and/or inductance is commonly added to "stretch" the waveform over time. A
typical lightning impulse, ie, a 1.5-50 uSec waveform, can be slowed down to a
50-200 uS switching waveform. This is usually varied by adding resistance
in series with the spark gaps but in some cases large inductors are added
especially if undesirable "ringing" occurs. Dr. Resonance.
Answer 2. July 19,
2004. Original poster: tamp elektronik. Hey Anthony:
Answer 3. July 19, 2004.
Original poster: Gerry R. Hi Anthony: If you discharge
into your primary inductance and assume no losses, then the inductive energy
will equal the capacitive energy:
Answer 4. July 19, 2004.
Original poster: Scot D. all depends on the internal
resistance of the cap the amount of mF and the voltages involved. Normally
most capacitors can deliver hundreds of amps of current in milliseconds... um
make that uSecs...Some caps are designed to deliver megawatts of power in sub
uSec times. even a 16VDC 3000 uF cap can weld itself ( its leads ) to
the shorting device. The caps used for quarter shrinking and can
crushing can be in the 100,000 amp range for a few uSeconds the more uF, the
less the resistance = impressive current flow.
The equations for MMC also were known:
These were combined into the program here:
A modern Excel version is here:
These two programs were used by Mark Broker to make the GeekGroup chart that
everyone goes by now. Eventually the equations were justified:
Cheers, Terry.
The Vishay datasheet for the VR37 resistors can be seen at:
http://www.vishay.com/docs/28733/vr37.pdf
Note that the peak pulse voltage rating (shown on page 3 of the spec) for a 10
meg resistor appears to be 10 KV! This implies a fair safety factor for
flash-over or arcing.
Regardless of the resistor's actual flash-over voltage, I have seen more MMC's
fail due to flashover to the adjacent capacitor than across a resistor. If you
are mounting your MMC capacitors in parallel rows, I would leave no less than
1/2" to 3/4" gap between any resistor/capacitor pair and next resistor/capacitor
in the string. Regards, Scott H.
Basically most people seem to use just a single 10Meg, 1/2W resistor without
problems. Some argue that's pushing one's luck and would recommend wiring
several in series or using a single HV resistor. The latter is significantly
more expensive, though.
The value is not too important so long as the value isn't so small that it
wastes significant energy nor too big so that you must wait several minutes
before things are safe to touch (arguably about 20V). It happens that 10Meg,
1/2W is a good compromise for 2kV. I would not recommend using one resistor on
a 3kV cap due to thermal problems. Mark B., Chief Engineer, The Geek
Group.
I use four in series, or the smallest that I can find, arranged in a zigzag
pattern across each capacitor (or array of capacitors in parallel). So far, no
problem at all. I check the resistors periodically. Antonio C.Q.
>Original poster: mercurus2000
>I was just curious, I hear the skin effect in human beings still very deep at
standard tesla coil frequencies, does anyone here have references or sources as
to where the information is gathered about how deep currents penetrate into the
human bodies at different frequencies? Thanks, Adam
The skin depth is the depth of a layer that if, the current were uniformly
distributed, would carry the same current density as the whole thing. In the
real thing, the current density falls off as exp(-x), so the classic definition
of skin depth is where the current is 1/e (exp(-1)) that at the surface.
(integrate e^x, etc., and you see that it works out...).
The depth is inversely proportional to the square root of
(conductivity*permeability*frequency)
In equations:
depth = c/sqrt(2*pi*sigma*mu*omega)
c= speed of light (3E8 m/sec)
sigma = conductivity
mu = permeability (4*pi*1E-7 for free space/non magnetic substances)
omega = (2*pi*frequency)
Some qualitative observations:
Higher conductivity: smaller skin depth
Ferrous materials: smaller skin depth (why steel is a good shield for magnetic
fields)
Higher frequency: smaller skin depth. Jim L.
inductor, the initial current is zero, and increases linearly with the time. So,
it doesn't slow down the current as it builds up the
magnetic field, but increases it in proportion to the magnetic field.
Antonio.)
The worst case for your capacitor would be a direct short circuit. Then the
current would be limited by the resistance of the shorting material and the
internal inductance of the capacitor.
A typical TC primary circuit, with secondary coil in place, is probably in the
range of 5-20 Ohms impedance (inductive reactance plus resistance) which sets
the max current value. I recall Terry Fritz has taken some measurements of this
information and might post them for you to review.
If you have access to a DSO you can freeze the discharge and actually see the
waveform to measure the values more exactly. Sometimes a local college or
university will take enough interest in your project to help you make some
measurements on your coil. It never hurts to wander in and ask. Try the
physics research dept or the electrical engineering dept.
A nice DSO picture of your waveform will also tell you if you are getting full
energy transfer in the first two or three "notches" for good efficiency. If not
it may be time to make some adjustments to the coeff. of coupling by raising the
sec coil in small increments to find the "sweet spot". Dr. R.
I= CdV/dt
to find the discharge current so you need to measure voltage and take the time
derivative multiply by capacitance. Lutfi.
1/2 LI^2 = 1/2 CV^2
Imax = Vmax / sqrt(L/C)
Date : Thu, 01 Jul 2004 16:16:20 -0600. Subject : Re: Capacitance of the human body
Original poster: "Peter Terren"
I imagine modelling of an irregular surface for E fields and capacitance is
tricky but this group does it.
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstract/94518807/ABSTRACT .
The result of 60 - 120 pF varies because of proximity to the ground plane.
120pf is with 10mm elevation i.e., shoes. Peter (Tesla Downunder),
http://tesladownunder.iinet.net.au
*****
Measuring ac Voltage and current on your TC
Question: > I am in the process of trying to work out a way to measure AC voltage and current flowing into my coil, and have run into a few problems in the availability (and price) of AC meters. I have worked out a method to use the much cheaper DC versions that I can easily get. Can someone please offer some advice on if this setup will work, or if I have missed some vital point. (Wouldn't surprise me!). Tristin.
Date : Mon, 04 Oct 2004 19:06:38 -0600
Subject : Re: Ammeter Configurations
This is how we do it. Since the coil is powered by an AC transformer, just use
a 0-250 full scale AC voltmeter that the dial faceplate is re-calibrated in
0-16,363 Volts. We usually round this off to 16,500 VAC full scale.
In normal operation the meter will read 14,400 Volts at 220 Volts input.
This is the Erms potential and the cap will fire at 1.414 * Erms (actually this
depends on your spark gap setting for exact value).
A cheap easy way to accomplish the task and no messy HV dividers necessary.
Also, very accurate for TC work requirements.
We also do this with NST's, just using a different value. The math is a simple
ratio proportion:
X = (250 V. * 14.4 kV) / 220 VAC X = 16.353 kV full scale reading for a
pole transformer
or X = (150 VAC * 12 kV) / 120 VAC X = 15 kV full scale for a 12 kV NST
Dr. Resonance
******
Calculating Capacitance of Stacked Toroids
Date : Thu, 09 Sep 2004 07:41:53 -0600. Subject : Re: Calculating capacitance of stacked toroids . . .
Question: Anyways, if you have two stacked toroids, what approximations can you use to get a ballpark number for capacitance of the toroid stack?
Answer: The result depends on
the aspect ratio of the toroids, but doesn't vary much. The Inca program can
easily calculate the capacitances (considering the toroids far from anything
else, one directly above the other).
Some examples:
Two 3x1 toroids: multiply by 164/135 = 1.21
Two 4x1 toroids: multiply by 203/172 = 1.18
Two 5x1 toroids: multiply by 241/207 = 1.16
Two 6x1 toroids: multiply by 278/242 = 1.15
The effect is smaller with thinner toroids. The factor tends to 1 for very thin
toroids. Better to make a larger toroid, if you want more capacitance, or
if you use two toroids, place them at some distance.
Two 3x1 toroids with a total height of 3 units: multiply by 185/135=1.37
Two 6x1 toroids with a total height of 6 units: multiply by 357/242=1.48
Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz
Answer 2: We measured this with
a pair of 48 x 12 toroid. It worked out to 1.5 * cap of single toroid. It also
worked out the same for a pair of 34.5 x 8 inch toroids.
We took this measurement with toroids elevated on a plastic tube to their approx
height above the floor that would be equal to their operating position, ie,
approx 10 ft. Outdoors, in the open. Dr. Resonance
******
> I have a demo version of (OrCAD) PSpice; this program suite contains a lot of (sub) programs, none of
>which seem to be able to do anything useful with a <file>.cir file (which is a text file). What particular program
>do I need to run a simulation from a 'cir' file?
Try SwitcherCad III:
http://www.linear.com/company/software.jsp
Small, easy to use, complete, free, and much, much, faster than the recent
incarnations of Pspice.
Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz.
******
Can anyone tell me which polarity will form more corona and arc further at a
given DC voltage? David R.
Hi David,
In non-scientific terms, IIRC, the terminal that is "pushing extra electrons
into the air" will form a local cloud of charge easier than the one that is
trying to "suck electrons out of the air." That would make negative the right
answer. Matt D.
******
Date : Sat, 02 Oct 2004 12:40:42 -0600. Subject : Re: Flat-Copper-Strip Flat-Spiral-Primary Inductance Calc'sready
Original poster: "Kurt Schraner"
All,
metal ribbon type spiral primary inductance calculation is now available, in
form of a zipped Excel, at:
http://home.datacomm.ch/k.schraner/FlatRibbonCoil.zip (~57kB)
The calculations have also been integrated into my TC-design tool:
http://home.datacomm.ch/k.schraner/TCplan.zip (272kB; now vers.2.00)
The calculation is now in excellent agreement with my measured L values: about
1% average error above turn 2. (Inductance meter is of insufficient
precision below ~3uH)
A graph is at:
http://home.tiscalinet.ch/m.schraner/Lstrip_NBS.gif
...as before, calculation by the Wheeler formula, gives about 17% high values,
compared to the experiments:
http://home.tiscalinet.ch/m.schraner/Lstrip_Wheeler.gif
A method, easier to implement, than the one in Patent:
http://hot-streamer.com/TeslaCoils/OtherPapers/J-Reed/us5079482.pdf
...mentioned by Terry, was found in the famous NBS Circular 74 of 1918, Pages
250 to 262 + 285. It can be had at:
http://hot-streamer.com/TeslaCoils/OtherPapers/Circ74/
(download Part5_10.tif till Part5_16.tif and Part5_27.tif)
I've not yet checked (i.e. vs. Antonio's INCA), if the method also works for the
design of the very low, single turn primary inductance of modern solid state
TC's (OLTC,DRSSTC), but may be...?
I'm also not certain about the higher frequency influence on the calculated
values. Anyway, tapping my primaries of little twin UBTT, at the predicted turn
values, seems to make perfect sense:
http://home.tiscalinet.ch/m.schraner/TwinWithRotaryinAction.jpg
(Pic shot by Urs Lauterburg at Physics Institute of University Bern)
BTW: a 27 page report about the UBTT (Uni-Bern-Tesla-Twin) is ready for download
at:
http://home.tiscalinet.ch/m.schraner/UBTT-Betrieb.pdf (4.4 MB)
Sorry, the report is in GERMAN language, and a little big. And thanks to Richie
Burnett, allowing me the use of his classic TC explanation method and pic's in
the report. Best regards, Kurt.
******
Lightning Detectors
Date : Mon, 26 Jul 2004 18:24:11 -0600. Subject : Lightning & TCs
Original poster: "J. B. Weazle McCreath"
Hello Coilers,
The recent thread on lightning and Tesla coils led me to do some web browsing
for lightning detectors. One site caught my attention when it was suggested
that the radio-active component of a smoke detector could be used to build a
lightning detector.
With my curiosity now activated, I wondered if an un-modified smoke detector
could be made to detect an electric field. I hooked up the mains powered
detector that I had in my junk box and fired a charge at it using a Zero-Stat(R)
static gun that I had left over from my record album days (now I'm dating
myself). Sure enough, the charge from the gun triggered the detector!
The next step was to solder a ten foot long wire to the metal cage that
surrounds the radio-active sensor portion of the detector and route it out
through a hole in the plastic case. I then installed the unit in my shop, about
twenty feet from my coil, and with the sensing wire running horizontally. I
fired up the coil, and to no
surprise the detector went off, indicating that the electric field had triggered
it.
From a purely safety conscious standpoint I would recommend using a battery
powered detector rather than a mains one so that there is no chance of 120
appearing on the added sense wire. My next test will be to hook it up outside
to a longer wire and wait for the next lightning storm to come my way. 73,
Weazle, VE3EAR/VE3WZL
Details of my "Hyperbaric Gap" and Tesla coil are at:
http://www.hurontel.on.ca/~weazle
******
Circuit Textbooks
Date : Sun, 26 Sep 2004 10:21:41 -0600. Subject : Free series of textbooks on circuits
Hello all, This link might be helpful to any newbies. It has free downloadable books (6 volumes) on electrical circuits. http://www.ibiblio.org/obp/electricCircuits/. Bill Mck.
Date : Sat, 24 Jul 2004 12:02:26 -0600. Subject : Wire length, coil geometry, and velocity factor
Original poster: "Paul Nicholson"
Recently Ed Phillips noticed that wire length divided by the free space
wavelength of the quarter wave resonance of an unloaded coil was a smooth
function of the h/d ratio and largely independent of the turn count.
It is commonly understood (we hope) by coilers that the resonant frequency of a
coil is not given by the quarter wave resonance of the straight wire from which
the coil was wound. The actual frequency usually exceeds the straight wire
prediction by 50% or more in typical TC secondaries.
This implies that signals (EM waves) at TC frequencies traverse the coil faster
than they would do if strictly confined to the helical path of the
winding. This is not unreasonable because each turn of the coil has some degree
of interaction with all the other turns via their E and H fields (inductive and
capacitive mutual coupling).
We can indicate numerically the extent to which signals 'leapfrog' the turns of
the winding by expressing the apparent or effective speed of propagation along
the wire as a ratio with the speed of light. This is the velocity factor of
the wire when wound [+].
For example, if a particular coil has a velocity factor of 1.72, this in effect
means that:
*) The 1/4 wave frequency will be 72% higher than that predicted for its
straight wire.
*) A signal entering the coil will appear at the other end as if it had
travelled the wire at 1.72 times the speed of light.
*) If we imagine the EM signal to be spiralling along the coil, the pitch of
this spiral would be 72% greater than that of the winding.
Ed's observation recognises that the velocity factor for a coil is a function
largely of the overall geometry of the coil and does not depend very much on how
many turns are put in. This means that it is worth while defining a geometry
factor with which to relate the velocity factor directly to the h/d ratio of the
coil.
The graph
http://www.abelian.demon.co.uk/tmp/ph1.gif
shows (green crosses) measured velocity factors for a bunch of coils of varying
sizes and turns. The blue line is a logarithmic function chosen for a
reasonable fit. The function used is
Ph1(h/d) = ln(h/d) * 0.39 + 1.19
where ln() is the natural logarithm. The trial function has been tested against
a larger set of modelled coils, and the results are plotted in the red dots.
The red dots actually represent 2732 assorted coils ranging from as few as 50
turns up to 3000 turns. Resonant frequencies of some of these coils go up into
the Mhz range. We still see a reasonably
good fit to Ph1(h/d) even when faced with such a wide range of hypothetical
coils.
The residual (the difference between Ph1(h/d) and the measured or modelled
velocity factor) is about +/-5%. Closer inspection of the comparison database
reveals that about half of this residual is due to variation of coil base height
above the modelled ground plane.
The function Ph1() can be used to directly estimate the quarter wave Fres from
the h/d ratio and the wire length:=
Fres = (0.39 * ln(h/d) + 1.19) * 75e6/wire_length (Hertz)
where wire_length is the total length of wire in metres. It seems we should
expect this prediction to be within about +/-5% of the actual frequency for most
coils. This is obviously a very much more direct approach to Fres than the
conventional route via calculations of inductance and capacitance.
All of the above refers the the fundamental (1/4 wave) free resonance of the
unloaded coil. Velocity factors for other frequencies will be different.
The next two overtones, 3/4 wave and 5/4 wave also follow a compact smooth curve
when their velocity factor is plotted against h/d ratio. The independence from
turns continues. However, these overtones don't seem to follow quite the same
sort of logarithmic function of h/d. (A database of modelled coils is available
in csv format if anyone wants to try for a fit).
It is clear that the function Ph1 (and the coils) tend towards some velocity
factor greater than 2 for large h/d. No measurements are currently available for
h/d > 10 so we can only speculate.
One common factor with all the coils modelled and measured in this comparison is
that they are all fairly close wound. The smallest modelled spacing ratio is
0.55, and our models continue to refer to close wound behaviour as we let h/d
tend to infinity. For this reason we should not be surprised that the velocity
tends to some number rather larger than, say, the 0.95 we would expect from a
straight wire.
To reach this straight wire velocity factor, our models and calculations would
have to allow the pitch to increase to infinity as well as the h/d ratio. This
they do not do.
We might anticipate that the compact distribution of velocity factors would be
lost if we allowed the pitch to increase substantially. Unfortunately our
software models are not qualified for large pitch coils since they rely on some
approximations which are only accurate when each turn is almost a
circle. Helical antenna modelling software might be tried instead, but those
packages tend to bog down when dealing with large numbers of turns. For that
reason it might have to be a task for the experimenters to tell us what happens
at pitch
angles larger than say 5 or 10 degrees.
[+]
The velocity factor of the wire when straight would be about 0.95, depending on
thickness. The velocity factor of the winding is given by
4 * wire_length * Fres / c
where c is 300e6 metres/sec, wire_length in metres, Fres in Hz.
Paul Nicholson.
Date : Thu, 24 Jun 2004 21:00:20 -0600. Subject : some of the reason why energy and power definitions are confusing
Original poster: "Alfred Erpel"
Howdy all,
A coulomb is (to me) an unsimplifiable property of the universe. It is
6.41418*10^18 electrons. You can't state this in a simpler form another way in
terms of ¹distance, mass, time and energy. It bugs the hell out of me that the
coulomb in the SI system is defined as a DERIVED unit in terms of amperes. And
amperes has the status of being a basic unit. Amperes is defined as
coulombs/second. Amperes were INVENTED by man yet have been conferred the
status of a basic unit. This I believe obfuscates and confuses many issues. I
have no idea why this was done. It is my opinion that energy has nothing to do
with time, however with this artificial definition, joules (energy) = watts *
seconds. With this system the energy unit has time in it and the power unit
doesn't.
remember, amps = coulombs / seconds below and:
joules = watts * seconds
joules = volts * amps * seconds
joules = volts * (coulombs / seconds) * seconds
joules = volts * coulombs
Hence, joules should (IMHO) always be spoken of as being equal to volt *
coulombs. This is a more basic unit and without reference to time. Power would
be volt * coulombs / second. This is way less confusing.
If anyone has a clue why the SI system made this exception to defining basic
units, I sure would like to hear it.
¹ distance, mass, time, and energy is it baby, that and nothing else, comprises
all that we know.
Regards, Al Erpel.
******
First of all thanks to Harry Goldman for creating the TCBA News
and to those who purchased some form of the TCBA Index. For
those who didn't, (you know who you are), reading the following
should be punishment enough.
This is a little story of how the TCBA News Index came about:
The Problem
After 14 years of subscribing to the TCBA News, I wanted a
convienient way of searching for specific topics without rereading
the whole series- not that I mind rereading old issues!
The Inquiry
I wrote Harry Goldman about the availability of an index and my
proposal to write an index as a computer text file to facilitate
electronic word searches. Harry informed me that Jim Roddy had
produced an Index thru Vol 10 Issue 1 but he was no longer active
in the TCBA. Others have inquired but none took up the task.
The Goal
Harry provided me a printed copy of Jim Roddy's TCBA Index. Being
an avid reader, sometimes a tidbit info contributor, but never an
original article author, I felt this is something I could do for
myself, Harry Goldman, and the TCBA membership.
The Baseline
I scanned the printed copy and used an Optical Character Recognition
(OCR) program to regenerate the original Index as a text (ASCII) file.
The quality of the original was average so there was alot of manual
editing. Once I had a clean copy on disk, I reformatted the columns
to remove wasteful spaces and thus become more memory efficient.
The Updates
I entered new index data at my son's little league baseball games on
a Psion Series3 palmtop computer in Spring 95. The new entries were
edited on an Amiga computer and PC compatable. Then merged to the
baseline file, alphabetized by subject and saved as a file. I then
resorted the file by volume-issue page for a table-of-contents appearance
and saved it as another file.
Both sorts were split into two half size files for smaller text editors
that cannot handle files greater than 45K. Finally both files were saved
as MS Word 6.0 format with a header and page numbers. These files were
laser printed with New Courier 10 Point Font for a precise column look.
The First Release (1995)
The Index was now complete to Vol 14 Issue 2 in late spring of 95. I sent
a printed copy to Harry Goldman for review of errors. He returned a short
list and gave general approval of the format. Asking if I wanted to
release it to the TCBA members, I started to determine pricing for disks,
paper copying, envelopes, postage, etc. Summer came and other work piled
up so I lost interest. Harry referred two people who contacted me for
Index related questions, both of which I handled.
The Second Release (1996)
Again in the Spring using the Psion Series3 at the ballgames, I updated
the Index thru Vol 15 Issue 2. Then repeated the efforts described in the
Updates section above and mailed a printed copy to Harry Goldman.
This time I wrote an advertisement/order form to appear as an insert
in the TCBA News and this readme file to accompany the Index.
The advertisement was included in TCBA News Vol 15 Issue 4. I updated
the Index to include Vol 15 Issues 3 and 4. I started filling orders to
the membership during the first days of October 1996.
My Philosophy
I wanted the TCBA News Index to be distributed mainly by computer disk
as alot of paper would be used on something that needs quarterly updates.
The word search capability of word processors or utility programs are
also a big plus.
I offered to have the volume-issue page sort printed as an addendum or
bonus in the TCBA News as the current data remains static. Entries for
each new issue are tacked on the end of the file, not mixed in with the
old entries as in the alphabetical subject sort. I don't think this will
happen as there are too many pages.
I don't have a homepage with Compuserve yet so I haven't posted the files
electronically. I hope to eventually post file updates on the internet
as part of a homepage in the future. Stay tuned. *(See New Releases below)
As far as distribution goes, I don't mind TCBA members copying the
Index (disk or printed) as a favor for other TCBA members in local groups
as long as there isn't any profit being made. I do not want the Index
bundled with any other software and/or sold for profit. I am trying to
distribute the Index as inexpensively as possible.
The Future
I hope to maintain updates to the index as long as the TCBA News
continues. I welcome comments or errors brought to my attention and
will try to incorporate them (fixes not errors) in future releases.
Obviously as the postage or amount of pages goes up, the cost will
follow. Again, computer disks are the cheaper option!
Disclaimer (the fine print)
There are no executable programs on the disk, only plain text (ASCII)
files and MS Word 6.0 files which have the same data as the text files.
I cannot guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the data. Use the
Index as a guide to explore and more fully appreciate the TCBA News.
*New Releases - Latest
The latest TCBA Index is now available on Steve Cole's Internet Homepage
at this address http://users.deltanet.com/~stcole/hv/tcba.html
Send a self addressed stamped envelope (SASE) for TCBA Index information
and the latest pricing to the address below. Thanks again.
My address is Robert Wroblewski
32 Barton Ave
Dracut, MA 01826-2204
USA
My email address is 71712.3423@compuserve.com
For back issues, article reprints, or new subcriptions of the TCBA NEWS.
The address is Tesla Coil Builders Association
Harry Goldman
3 Amy Lane
Queensbury, NY 12804
USA
Cockroft-Walton Voltage Multiplier Components
Coming Soon!