How to build a Tesla Coil

 by DevCoder
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Step 1: DANGER

sign_danger-high-voltage-lg.jpg
Unlike some other high voltage experiments, a Tesla coil's streamers can be very harmful. If you are shocked by the streamers, you will not feel pain, but your circulatory and nervous system can sustain severe damage. DO NOT TOUCH IT WHILE ON UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.

Also, I don't take any responsibility for you hurting yourself.

This isn't to say that you shouldn't get into high voltage though, its just that if you are planning for this to be your first HV project, its a little to involved. Instead, try out a nice microwave oven transformer, and be safe!
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The Asian Cow says: May 16, 2013. 11:39 AM
Do the saltwater capacitors do well with time? I will be leaving my tesla coil at my school and it would be sitting for months at a time. If that is not good for the salt water capacitors then if I were to get an actual capacitor, what voltage and capicitance should I look for? Also do the direction, spacing, and shape of the primary coil matter? It sounds like you can "tune" it for maximum spark length but if I just set it up in a coil or helix with no measurements will it still produce something?
saksham bhadani says: May 14, 2013. 8:12 AM
from where have you bought thin copper tubing?
Liam.great98 says: May 13, 2013. 1:55 PM
OBIT stands for Oil Burner Ignition Transformer
rocketfire4 says: Apr 2, 2013. 6:25 PM
just wondering where would you get the neon sign transformer for cheep or free because i was looking online for them and they were pretey expansive like 75-150 dollers idk what BOIT stands for
Morzie...! says: Mar 6, 2013. 12:38 AM
would you be able to use capacitors from a microwave, as im guessing you got the slow engine for the secondary from one?
Jknapp25 says: Mar 4, 2013. 12:54 AM
It looks like your capacitors are in series, why aren't they in parallel? Also deep should the wire go into the bottle? Does it even matter because the salt water mix is considered the inner plate, the salt is all at the bottom though. Lastly, if the foil is the outer plate, how do you connect a wire to it?
The_Tech_Man says: Feb 26, 2013. 3:30 PM
I wanna see him connect it to a nuclear reactor and make someone touch it. >:D
Credible Halter says: Feb 12, 2013. 6:03 PM
would a solid state transformer work, and if so would what efect would it have on it?
and i am not new with electricity.
Credible Halter in reply to Credible HalterFeb 12, 2013. 6:04 PM
just new to tesla coils!
sarithallen says: Feb 9, 2013. 6:16 PM
Why can't the primary by completley horizontal instead of your final upside down spring design?
dming98 says: Feb 1, 2013. 6:09 AM
Does any body know somewhere cheap to get all the materials
fun bags says: Feb 24, 2012. 7:32 AM
What type of transformer do i need i already know that its a 9kv and all but i ordered one for about 45 dollars and it wont power my tesla coil because it is a solid state transformer. Can someone help me please?
funwithpower4242 in reply to fun bagsDec 4, 2012. 2:16 PM
there is a good webste www.pupman.com and it has an active mailing list - someone there can probably tell you how to use that to make a solid state tesla coil
smoothisfast1 in reply to funwithpower4242Jan 10, 2013. 11:24 AM
I still can't make sparks come out of my toroid. I am using a 20kw transformer and ten 20 amp capacitors. Should I increase my capacitor bank?
smoothisfast1 in reply to smoothisfast1Jan 10, 2013. 12:10 PM
I mean 20kv capacitors.
Evisela says: Feb 18, 2012. 2:55 PM
3 Things. 1. Can I use a computer power supply instead of an nst? 2. Can you write out what to connect everything to plz because I don't really understand the diagram. 3. Can you use beer bottles for the capacitors? Thanks!
funwithpower4242 in reply to EviselaDec 4, 2012. 2:04 PM
beer bottles can indeed work for the capacitor if they are glass. clear beer bottles like from Corona are prefered since the colored glass (green, brown etc) may cause a bit of dielectric weakness. but it should still work and get you started. Tesla himself used wine bottles in a big metal vat.
smoothisfast1 in reply to funwithpower4242Jan 10, 2013. 10:49 AM
I found that salt water capacitors are unreliable and don't last long. Better to bite the bullet and buy commercial capacitors.
crazy-blender in reply to EviselaAug 31, 2012. 5:28 PM
no you cannot use a computer power supply it has to be high voltage
RobandStephenCUBED says: Dec 18, 2012. 10:28 AM
me and my friend are doing this for the BASEF science faire, then converting it to play music. Thank you for the design
stevo-d says: Jan 4, 2011. 8:40 PM
Ummm, harmful amounts of UV light appears to be visible at your spark gap... I'm no expert here, but from what I've read, you really should have that enclosed for the safety of your eyes... Has been described elsewhere as like watching an arc welder, and use arc welding eye protection if you DO NEED to look at it for any reason.
sam48415 in reply to stevo-dJan 27, 2011. 5:50 PM
Your probabally going to get hurt anyway, so it doesent matter. I highly doubt that it is as bright as an arc welder, and will harm your eyes that much
stevo-d in reply to sam48415Jan 28, 2011. 4:47 AM
Well you're right that it would not be as bad as an arc welder because if it was, it would probably melt the terminals!
My point is however that high voltage arcs do indeed produce harmful ultra violet light and just letting anyone intending to do this know to take caution.
As for "getting hurt anyway", I will disagree... Again, we should take caution... Make some pretty sparks, but DON'T make yourself part of the circuit!!!
sam48415 in reply to stevo-dJan 28, 2011. 12:16 PM
Yeh i agree, dont be a conducter of that circuit, it will mess u up. Now that i look at the bottom, where the spark gap is, it looks kinda bright, take caution
red_green in reply to sam48415May 27, 2011. 9:29 AM
so what would happen if i used a semi-silvered mirror to protect the spark gap, but still let u see the spark?
eichermacher in reply to red_greenDec 13, 2012. 1:30 PM
Semi-silvered mirror might work, but a few filters to filter out most of the light would work just as well. Rosco has UV filters you can buy, as well as good filters you could use to filter out most of the visible spectrum. That way you'd be able to see the spark but wouldn't have to worry about the intense light.
sam48415 in reply to red_greenJun 23, 2011. 10:10 PM
I wouldent bother...
stevo-d in reply to red_greenMay 29, 2011. 7:11 PM
I'm not an expert in light radiation, but I would bet you would still get UV reflecting off such a mirror.
I used to work with high intensity UV light equipment for curing acrylics and we needed to be able to watch it... We worked with the work-piece and light source behind a thick (5-8mm) piece of orange transparent perspex - you could still see the light shining, but it no longer appeared blue and no UV would get through.

I would also like to mention that the equipment I worked with was an arc lamp that sent the UV through an optic-fibre cable - the light coming from the end of the cable would easily set tissue paper on fire, and a few careless co-workers got some nasty burns.

UV LIGHT IS DANGEROUS - Be careful.
red_green says: Jun 20, 2010. 11:14 PM
if i eliminated the ground on the secondary, would it create a better display?
i ask this as i don't want to have to ground it directly into the ground.
also, i wonder why you couldn't connect the three grounds together to eliminate any more grounds to condense it into one outlet.
red_green in reply to red_greenJun 21, 2010. 6:35 AM
i have been thinking, and i think that the electricity would take the path of least resistance (down into the ground), or are all you talking about it like high pressure water in a pipe with holes in it???
eichermacher in reply to red_greenDec 13, 2012. 1:27 PM
Without a grounding wire, going all the way to the ground is not the path of least resistance. If you let the coil run without providing any specific place for the secondary coil to ground, the electrical arc will hit the primary coil.
eichermacher says: Dec 13, 2012. 1:18 PM
If I wanted to buy capacitors instead of making salt capacitors, what kind of capacitors should I purchase?
geofisiks says: Jan 5, 2012. 1:49 PM
How do you test a salt water capacitor? I have a multimeter but it doesn't read any capacitance when i connect the two leads. This MM has micro and nano capacitance readings.

Thanks.
funwithpower4242 in reply to geofisiksDec 4, 2012. 2:17 PM
i have a video on my youtube channel technow1zard where i make a saltwater cap and test it out
smoothisfast1 in reply to geofisiksFeb 21, 2012. 6:52 PM
You have to charge them first with a power source. As soon as you connect your multimeter, the capacitors will quickly lose their charge, so your first reading will be the capacitance.
MRBADASS says: May 31, 2011. 4:41 PM
i have a question, how did u ground the secondary coil??
fun bags in reply to MRBADASSFeb 24, 2012. 7:37 AM
hook it up to the capiciters
funwithpower4242 in reply to fun bagsDec 4, 2012. 2:15 PM
Actually it's the primary coil (the big spiral cone of copper pipe) that is hooked to the capacitors. The secondary coil - the one around the PVC with lots of turns of the thin copper wire - is best grounded to a rod that is literally pounded into the dirt outside. Otherwise have it go to some flat piece of metal laying on the table on the side or on the ground (look up 'ground plane) or for a small coil it won't hurt to just make sure it does not arc out to the primary coil. Cover with electrical tape, a few layers, to prevent lower arcs from the bottom of the secondary from leaking out. DO NOT connect the secondary to the capacitors - or you may have to spend all that time winding another secondary again!
prussell3 says: Apr 5, 2012. 1:05 AM
Couldn't using salt water in the capacitor have the potential to cause a build up of explosive hydrogen gas? With high voltage sparks flying around, explosive gases would not be a good thing.

Thanks for hearing my worry
funwithpower4242 in reply to prussell3Dec 4, 2012. 2:08 PM
yes it can be a concern, where you have the wire going in through the bottle cap leave a gap of space at least a couple to few mm around most of the circumfrence. keep your runs of the coil to 5 or maybe 10 minutes at most to reduce risk.
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