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Registered Member #63
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:18AM
Location:
Posts: 1425
Whilst this is by no means my first SSTC, it's the first one I've ever put into a box and called "finished"! I feel sad for not taking more photos of this whilst I was building it.
Most of the bits (including the IXDD414 driver) are surface-mount. I'll never again attempt to solder down a TO-263 device with just a soldering iron; it was a pain in the arse, the copper on the board didn't have enough area to heatsink it properly, and was too thin to transmit much heat well, anyway. I'll have to buy some solder-paste and try my luck at toaster-oven reflow someday.
You just pop up to 40V in the side and that goes straight through the single IXDD414 into the primary. There's an 8-SOIC regulator for the oscillator and the cliched blue LED ^_^
I didn't have the guts to commit to fixed-value resistors, but I guess I can always do it now since I'm not going to change the secondary in a hurry :)
The aluminium box itself is connected to the base of the secondary and one end of the primary, so only one feedthrough needed for the hot wire after the DC-blocking capacitor. The aluminium box is 50mm x 50mm x 30mm.
A while ago I called for people to show some interest in smaller coils, but there wasn't much response. This coil didn't take long! Will someone else try their luck?
Registered Member #180
Joined: Thu Feb 16 2006, 02:12AM
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 187
Man that thing looks sweet, I love the small coils. Takes alot of ingenuity and skill to make something like that. Great work. I tried to build a small coil but it wasn't especially small when all was said and done.
Registered Member #56
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 05:02AM
Location: Southern Califorina, USA
Posts: 2445
Proof that coils and girls can coexist
Amazing work, I have a hard time getting tube coils work at over a MHz. And that is a pretty decent sized discharge considering that the switch has no heatsink and you are running at 4mhz more or less CW
Registered Member #63
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:18AM
Location:
Posts: 1425
Cheers! I'm pleased enough with the result. Initially, I did want to cram a proper class-E coil into the box, but then I started to realise the difficulty of fitting the magnetics and caps in, so I compromised my principles to satisfy the plasma cravings.
The best part about this is that I know I won't be tempted to cannibalise the coil for parts; and because the primary is tight-fitting and held in place by the secondary which is screwed down, quick and easy plasma is as easy as plugging the coil in! No messing around with alligator leads, but just power supplies... :-/
Eek, the IXDD414 is starting to melt itself off the copper cladding. Next time I'll have to go with a TO-220 properly screwed to the inside of the case.
Registered Member #89
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 02:40PM
Location: Zadar, Croatia
Posts: 3145
Hey Matt, beautiful coil But you didn't care much how your board looks did you
Why did you need that much pots in there?
TO220 IC on large heat spreader might be a good idea... Do you use Schottky diodes across outputs in case of hard switching? I wouldn't really trust mos diodes in this application...
BTW, I think that it wouldn't be hard to use some kind of feedback, like a CT directly into IC's input? ,)
A class E version would be nice.
Class E coils are much more difficult than they may first look - and they work best in all-around-the-table mode with fixed oscillator. They want very fine and constant loading and frequency - and really hate to be moved around, held and hugged.
By using secondary feedback PLL I just made things worse than they would be with open loop. After I boxed it up I never really managed to tune the coil properly and with small heatsink I had inside I couldn't achieve even like half of CW arc size at 1Mhz which Richie Burnett did at 4.
And I also think it would be great hassle to put all the required components in a small box like this.
Registered Member #63
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:18AM
Location:
Posts: 1425
I'm tying to work out which looks better, the coil or the girlfriend! Naw, even though it's boxed up, it really doesn't look that good... it just looks like every other SSTC out there, except crammed into an aluminium box.
Some day I'd like to really play around with tapered coils with different secondary winding colours (black, blue), and design something ornamental to go over it that A) keeps fingers out, B) reduces the RF emissions, and C) looks good.
Perhaps next time there's a rainy day here, I'll pull it apart and fix some things up... including going with TO-220 drivers. But, the coil itself isn't new or unique (see Roffesoft and Jimmy's IXDD-based coils), isn't all that small in comparison, and the Fres isn't that high...
wrote ... ...But you didn't care much how your board looks did you...
Aw, I cared whilst I was designing it, but it quickly became apparent when I was trying to cut it out with a hacksaw, and when I had to mount all the extra stuff in the box that it wasn't going to be pretty. It looked great with just the surface-mount stuff on it! :P
wrote ... Do you use Schottky diodes across outputs in case of hard switching?
Yep, I've got surface-mount 1N5819 Schottky diodes clamping the output to the v+/gnd rails. I'm not sure how hot they get, since I can't fit my fingers down there to touch them.
wrote ... Why did you need that much pots in there?
They're involved in various parts of the driver like fine-tuning the RC, and varying the duty cycle that the IXDD414 sees. In due course, I could replace each pot with a fixed-value resistor... assuming the tolerances were good enough... maybe.
The main thing that worried me about fitting a class-E coil in the box is that there'd be little space between the flywheel/network components and the edges of the box... and the inductors' Q would turn to crap because they're surrounded on six sides by masses of ground.
I suppose a real challenge next could involve fitting two boards in there; one with a better driver, and the other with a TL494 and MOSFETs to drive a little ferrite transformer to provide proper audio modulation... that would probably take at least two rainy days, however. =P
Registered Member #567
Joined: Tue Mar 06 2007, 10:55AM
Location: Singapore
Posts: 147
Ooh, nice coil! How many turns are there on it? (Approx, of course)
Also, I have a question- Will this circuit: run a tiny tesla coil? If it does, I'm going to try one really tiny one someday. I wonder if I can beat the size.
Though of course, the smallest is that 3cm one I saw some time back. Nanotess or something, I think!
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