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Registered Member #2318
Joined: Fri Aug 28 2009, 01:22AM
Location:
Posts: 33
Just wondering if this would be a good idea to try out if there is some reason this wouldn't work. I'm thinking of a 2" diameter secondary coil, with a 5 inch primary coil at its base, and instead of placing the feedback coil above or below the primary, actually putting it on a larger 6" form directly outside the primary. Has anyone here tried this before?
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
You raise an interesting point, Mr Duroo, because Nikolai Tesla designed a number of resonant RF HV transformers with quite different topologies, though today people usually only think of the vertical secondary with the primary wound around the bottom as being 'a Tesla coil.'
As for your specific question about the feedback winding, the coupling coefficient must be sufficient to deliver sufficient in-phase voltage to the grid to maintain oscillation.
Too little, and oscillation will die out; too much and the valve may 'squegg' - cyclically switch itself on and off at some quite low frequency, or it may enter some chaotic oscillatory mode whose nature we hardly dare guess at.
Registered Member #230
Joined: Tue Feb 21 2006, 08:01PM
Location: Gracefield lower Hutt
Posts: 284
This depends if you want to control with the primary parameters or the secondary parameters. magnetics tend to invoke the inverse cube law instead of the light and RF inverse square law
Registered Member #162
Joined: Mon Feb 13 2006, 10:25AM
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3140
Proud Mary wrote ...
You raise an interesting point, Mr Duroo, because Nikolai Tesla designed a number of resonant RF HV transformers with quite different topologies, though today people usually only think of the vertical secondary with the primary wound around the bottom as being 'a Tesla coil.'
Briefly, a part of my career (?) included taking patents owned by my employer, and thinking up ways to break the patent so that my employer could patent those too, which makes me suspect that some of the patents (e.g. bi-filar primary) are more to exclude imitators than beneficial innovations, of little real value. (how many US patents for an improved or novel mousetrap ?)
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Oh yes, Tesla was very quick to patent, and I'm sure would have put up these anticipatory prophylactic blocks - I can't think what to call them! - as you suggest.
My knowledge of TC variants is really only what I can recall from enjoyable browsing of Victorian scientific illustrations and engineering drawings.
I recall one horizontal push-pull device where the centrally positioned primary was located inside the tube around which the secondary was wound.
When looking at antique apparatus and vintage experiments I always find myself hoping that perhaps the science had moved too fast, that the pressure to move on with new research was so great that potential avenues of discovery were overlooked and have remained undiscovered to this day - which I am sure must happen. Mostly I am envious of the simplicity of the equipment with which revolutionary discoveries were made in the early years of the last century, equipment so simple that even someone with only very modest abilities like myself could construct it with simple tools - the triode valve, Cockcroft & Walton's particle accelerator, X-ray crystallography, Wilson's cloud chamber, the radio telescope, the junction diode - and so on. But of course these illustrious thinkers had to think of these things first! :)
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