Welcome
Username or Email:

Password:


Missing Code




[ ]
[ ]
Online
  • Guests: 33
  • Members: 0
  • Newest Member: omjtest
  • Most ever online: 396
    Guests: 396, Members: 0 on 12 Jan : 12:51
Members Birthdays:
All today's birthdays', congrats!
Mathias (41)
slash128v6 (52)


Next birthdays
02/01 Barry (70)
02/01 Snowcat (37)
02/01 wylie (43)
Contact
If you need assistance, please send an email to forum at 4hv dot org. To ensure your email is not marked as spam, please include the phrase "4hv help" in the subject line. You can also find assistance via IRC, at irc.shadowworld.net, room #hvcomm.
Support 4hv.org!
Donate:
4hv.org is hosted on a dedicated server. Unfortunately, this server costs and we rely on the help of site members to keep 4hv.org running. Please consider donating. We will place your name on the thanks list and you'll be helping to keep 4hv.org alive and free for everyone. Members whose names appear in red bold have donated recently. Green bold denotes those who have recently donated to keep the server carbon neutral.


Special Thanks To:
  • Aaron Holmes
  • Aaron Wheeler
  • Adam Horden
  • Alan Scrimgeour
  • Andre
  • Andrew Haynes
  • Anonymous000
  • asabase
  • Austin Weil
  • barney
  • Barry
  • Bert Hickman
  • Bill Kukowski
  • Blitzorn
  • Brandon Paradelas
  • Bruce Bowling
  • BubeeMike
  • Byong Park
  • Cesiumsponge
  • Chris F.
  • Chris Hooper
  • Corey Worthington
  • Derek Woodroffe
  • Dalus
  • Dan Strother
  • Daniel Davis
  • Daniel Uhrenholt
  • datasheetarchive
  • Dave Billington
  • Dave Marshall
  • David F.
  • Dennis Rogers
  • drelectrix
  • Dr. John Gudenas
  • Dr. Spark
  • E.TexasTesla
  • eastvoltresearch
  • Eirik Taylor
  • Erik Dyakov
  • Erlend^SE
  • Finn Hammer
  • Firebug24k
  • GalliumMan
  • Gary Peterson
  • George Slade
  • GhostNull
  • Gordon Mcknight
  • Graham Armitage
  • Grant
  • GreySoul
  • Henry H
  • IamSmooth
  • In memory of Leo Powning
  • Jacob Cash
  • James Howells
  • James Pawson
  • Jeff Greenfield
  • Jeff Thomas
  • Jesse Frost
  • Jim Mitchell
  • jlr134
  • Joe Mastroianni
  • John Forcina
  • John Oberg
  • John Willcutt
  • Jon Newcomb
  • klugesmith
  • Leslie Wright
  • Lutz Hoffman
  • Mads Barnkob
  • Martin King
  • Mats Karlsson
  • Matt Gibson
  • Matthew Guidry
  • mbd
  • Michael D'Angelo
  • Mikkel
  • mileswaldron
  • mister_rf
  • Neil Foster
  • Nick de Smith
  • Nick Soroka
  • nicklenorp
  • Nik
  • Norman Stanley
  • Patrick Coleman
  • Paul Brodie
  • Paul Jordan
  • Paul Montgomery
  • Ped
  • Peter Krogen
  • Peter Terren
  • PhilGood
  • Richard Feldman
  • Robert Bush
  • Royce Bailey
  • Scott Fusare
  • Scott Newman
  • smiffy
  • Stella
  • Steven Busic
  • Steve Conner
  • Steve Jones
  • Steve Ward
  • Sulaiman
  • Thomas Coyle
  • Thomas A. Wallace
  • Thomas W
  • Timo
  • Torch
  • Ulf Jonsson
  • vasil
  • Vaxian
  • vladi mazzilli
  • wastehl
  • Weston
  • William Kim
  • William N.
  • William Stehl
  • Wesley Venis
The aforementioned have contributed financially to the continuing triumph of 4hv.org. They are deserving of my most heartfelt thanks.
Forums
4hv.org :: Forums :: Tesla Coils
« Previous topic | Next topic »   

GDT problems

1 2 
Move Thread LAN_403
Andrew H
Wed Jan 09 2008, 07:01AM Print
Andrew H Registered Member #1198 Joined: Sat Dec 29 2007, 05:39AM
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 21
I constructed a GDT for my first SSTC last night. I made it by wrapping CAT5 cable around a ferrite torrid (in the fashion that Steve Ward used on his DRSSTC1). Here is a picture of the GDT:

1199861342 1198 FT1630 Gdt


I know the leads are a bit long and that is probably negatively affecting performance but I don't want to chop them down until I build the H-bridge and know exactly how long they have to be. I connected it to a set of TI driver chips (UCC37321 and UCC37322). A 555 timer provided the input to the driver chips. Here is the output relative to ground:

1199861342 1198 FT1630 Gdt Output First Test


The output has a huge over/under shoot (when not even connected to a MOSFET!) and the output droops substantially. I'm going to try removing the outer case of the CAT5 and winding the wires in a polyfilar bundle. Hopefully that will lower leakage inducance and help the output.

What else might help my GDT produce a cleaner output?
Back to top
...
Wed Jan 09 2008, 07:22AM
... Registered Member #56 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 05:02AM
Location: Southern Califorina, USA
Posts: 2445
You need to at leat attach a dummy load to the output (like a 1nf cap or so, make it about the same size as the gate on your transistors) to see what is happening. Also, to get rid of the spikes the traditional route is to add back to back zener diode across the output.
Back to top
Steve Ward
Wed Jan 09 2008, 07:30AM
Steve Ward Registered Member #146 Joined: Sun Feb 12 2006, 04:21AM
Location: Austin Tx
Posts: 1055
Be sure to twist the primary and secondary leads together to lower the wiring inductance. Be sure you arent saturating the thing! The droopy-ness of that waveform looks highly suspicious.

If you really followed the same technique i used, the coupling is very high. But it can be difficult to fit enough turns on a smaller core to avoid saturation, so sometimes its best to only use the number of wire strands that you absolutely need.
Back to top
Andrew H
Wed Jan 09 2008, 08:32AM
Andrew H Registered Member #1198 Joined: Sat Dec 29 2007, 05:39AM
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 21
For testing I am using one wire for the primary and one for the secondary (1:1 ratio). Other than those two wires all the rest of the wires in the CAT5 cable are not connected to anything. I don't think that I could be saturating the core that easily. How would I be able to tell if I was saturating it?

I tried attaching a small ceramic capacitor across the output but it didn't change anything.
Back to top
Kizmo
Wed Jan 09 2008, 10:40AM
Kizmo Registered Member #599 Joined: Thu Mar 22 2007, 07:40PM
Location: Northern Finland, Rovaniemi
Posts: 624
Take a look here:

Link2

Back to top
ragnar
Wed Jan 09 2008, 10:41AM
ragnar Registered Member #63 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:18AM
Location:
Posts: 1425
wrote ...
I don't think that I could be saturating the core that easily. How would I be able to tell if I was saturating it?

Actually, with only four or five turns, I'm pretty sure you'd be close to saturating the core at this considerably low frequency. The "drooping" which Steve Ward refers to is a good indicator that something's wrong; double your turncount.
Back to top
Wolfram
Wed Jan 09 2008, 11:54AM
Wolfram Registered Member #33 Joined: Sat Feb 04 2006, 01:31PM
Location: Norway
Posts: 971
Am I the only one that notices that his duty cycle is way off? Having a duty cycle other than 50% is an easy way to saturate the core if you don't have a DC blocking cap before the GDT. Either way, get the duty cycle as close to 50% as you can, this is going to improve the waveform too. I agree with many of the others in this thread, you seem to have too few turns on the GDT. Try to connect two windings in series for 8 turns.
Back to top
HV Enthusiast
Wed Jan 09 2008, 12:02PM
HV Enthusiast Registered Member #15 Joined: Thu Feb 02 2006, 01:11PM
Location:
Posts: 3068
You need more turns. Double your turn count and go from there.

Back to top
Marko
Wed Jan 09 2008, 02:00PM
Marko Registered Member #89 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 02:40PM
Location: Zadar, Croatia
Posts: 3145
You guys all just read andrew's mind for the frequency (which he didn't mention anywhere)?

And yes, nobody notices anything wrong about duty cycle?


Andrew, you need closely 50% duty cycle input to GDT, and use a DC blocking capacitor in series with your driver output, otherwise small DC caused by uneven duty cycle saturates the core.

7474 bistable can give you good 50% duty cycle output.


I don't know why are you guys panicked for saturation so much, unless we are in audio frequencies here.

I used 6 turns on about 2x smaller core for my DRSSTC at 100kHz, and it worked very well.

If in doubt just use datastream's site.
Link2
Back to top
ragnar
Wed Jan 09 2008, 02:42PM
ragnar Registered Member #63 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 06:18AM
Location:
Posts: 1425
wrote ...
You guys all just read andrew's mind for the frequency (which he didn't mention anywhere)?

Single-turn GDTs are acceptable at insane frequencies. It thereby goes that two-turn GDTs are appropriate at insane/2 frequencies, and a four-turn GDT is only appropriate at insane/4 frequencies.

Since this is Andrew's first coil, I safely assume that the frequency is not more than quarter-insane. Therefore, he should use more than four turns on his gate-driver transformer.

Hence the summarized advice:
double your turn-count.
tweak the 555 until the duty is much closer to 50%.
use DC-blocking caps in series with the GDT primary if not already doing so.


1199889747 63 FT37172 Lowind1

1199889747 63 FT37172 Lowind2
Back to top
1 2 

Moderator(s): Chris Russell, Noelle, Alex, Tesladownunder, Dave Marshall, Dave Billington, Bjørn, Steve Conner, Wolfram, Kizmo, Mads Barnkob

Go to:

Powered by e107 Forum System
 
Legal Information
This site is powered by e107, which is released under the GNU GPL License. All work on this site, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 License. By submitting any information to this site, you agree that anything submitted will be so licensed. Please read our Disclaimer and Policies page for information on your rights and responsibilities regarding this site.