Step 4: Prepare the Bases and Wind the Primary
Optional was the addition of 2 supports that I zip-tied the primary to.
Forgot to add how to make the spark gap! It is just two bolts in a open-air wooden box, and they are adjustable for tuning, etc. See the last image...
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plese respond at arhabb953@gmail.com
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu [DOT] edu/hbase/electric/pplate.html#c1
i think the capacitance is about 4uf (which is a ton for 15kv!)
you also don't need to pm me because i see all the messages posted on my instructables
My second one, was a giant! I had a bunch of hard cardboard rings from steel banding rolls. I used a sandable primer and made them smooth, then painted them flat black, and coated them with triple thick spray plastic. They were 18 inches dia. I built a 1x2 frame for the rings, having 8 vertical stands. I wrapped each of these rings for my secondary coils using recycled TV and computer magnet wire from the tubes. A lot of extra work, but it was after all, free wire. Leaving 4 inch gaps between rings, this monster stood 10 ft tall. I had 6 30 gal. salt water capacitors feeding the primary. I used two very large salad bowls to make my terminal capacitor top. I had a friend spot weld the bowls together. We had drilled a hole for the large bolt in the bottom of the bowel and set it inside the stainless steel pipe extending above the stand.
It is amazing how bright halogen lights get from the feedback into the powerlines outside. Wasn't intentional btw. Just happened. HV diodes were used to prevent this later.
Fired it up Halloween night in the front yard. Nobody came to the door, lol.
After it had been running over an hour, the FCC paid me a visit. It was jamming particular freqs. and I had to shut it down. It had a very wide bandwith.
I would love to play with such things again, but I have a pacemaker/defibrillator now. Can't play anymore. All I can do now is admire others work, from a safe distance, or photos. For what it is worth, it is a cheap way to turn your lame halogens into high intensity lights using a small coil wired to the halogens. A 250 kV coil works very well on enhancing the intensity of halogen lights at jobsites. Make sure the feedback is not blocked so the lights will get very bright.
Nice job. That is a nice sized coil in the last pic.
... because there isnt one in the first pic and the next pics show the pipe attached from the top.
Does the pvc get mounted on top of the wood?
Can't tell from pic!
- Stranded wire should work, but there's no harm in experimenting
- Well, I just made it an arbitrary shape that didn't get hit my the discharge terminal, but it looks about at a 70 degree angle with the board. The distance and shape matters, but I'm not exactly sure how (again, experiment!)