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Registered Member #205
Joined: Sat Feb 18 2006, 11:59AM
Location: Skørping, Denmark
Posts: 741
All, I have noticed, that The typical mmc of The past, these days seems to be replaced by a single string of some rather beefy Looking capacitors. I would appreciate a pointer to a source of these caps, since I have a medium sized coil in The planning stage.
Registered Member #58522
Joined: Tue Mar 15 2016, 08:33PM
Location:
Posts: 50
I think the Cornell-Dubliier 942C series is often used, in particular these:
Look for the self-healing polypropylene film types. The total voltage rating of the cap string is important, as well as the peak current, so if your peak current is high (300 to 400 A/pk) you may have to put several strings in parallel.
There are also cheaper Chinese capacitors you could try
For the higher values of capacitance you probably need several strings in parallel to reach the rated peak current.
I built a capacitor from sheets of aluminum roof flashing and polyethylene painters tarp, 26 nF @ 60 kVDC, using 23 plates separated by 3 mm of dielectric. It seems to work, but its rather bulky. No arcing through it the dielectric (yet).
Registered Member #1403
Joined: Tue Mar 18 2008, 06:05PM
Location: Denmark, Odense C
Posts: 1968
Finn is no new name in Tesla coiling business, he is not looking for the regular MMC capacitors you are suggesting, he is looking for large MKP snubber capacitors in the range of 1-2kV, 2-4uF, 50-100Arms, 1000Apeak.
Maybe you could even pioneer trying out those "DAWNCAP" on aliexpress ;)
Registered Member #205
Joined: Sat Feb 18 2006, 11:59AM
Location: Skørping, Denmark
Posts: 741
orac12 wrote ...
Has anyone used the acrotonics caps before and know if they are any good. Also any insight at to what the peak current rating may be?
Orac12,
A datasheet usually shows up in PDF format, if you punch the manufacturers part number in Google:
I am among the pioneers of the Multi Mini Caps, since I was fortunate enough to join the Tesla Coil Community at the time, where Terry Fritz made the first one. I made the second one, and the rest is history.
From a gut feeling point of view, it would be nice to use capacitors with Solid metal electrodes, such as used in the much fabled DC942 series, where the external electrodes are made of foil. This ensures superior pulse current handling characteristics. Due to a desire for self healing properties, the floating internal electrode is made from metallized foil.
I have found experimentally, though, that even high current primary tank circuits, such as the ones found in OLTC coils, and the Triggered BRISG coils, run well and reliably with capacitors constructed solely from metallized foil, for example the CD940. It all boils down to building a capacitor that will sustain both RMS and Peak currents. The voltage ratings are quite a bit more funky. The mentioned Arcotronics caps have a peak current rating of 1600A, and that should suffice for a single string, even up into the larger coils, over time, the voltage rating has shown to be DC rating = AC rating in a tesla coil.
So I intend to use them in my next coil, 10 in series, for 500nF in a 2XSemikron SKM400GB124D based coil. Like Terry told me, about 16 years ago: "I wouldn´t worry much, Finn, Just build it, and It will work fine"
I have just placed an order for 25 of the arcotronics caps, I will put them into a coil designed to take the steam out of one of the last no-go´s of Tesla coiling, so we will soon know.
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