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Re: Potting compound suggestions



Original poster: "Daniel Barrett by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <dbarrett1-at-austin.rr-dot-com>

     How about hot glue? It's reasonable easy to remove with a heat gun and
has good high voltage properties.
db

----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2003 1:54 PM
Subject: Potting compound suggestions


 > Original poster: "Richter, Rick by way of Terry Fritz
<teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <rick.richter-at-hp-dot-com>
 >
 >
 >
 >          Hi all,
 >
 >          I'm looking for some suggestions for relatively cheap potting
 > compounds for a couple circuits I'm putting together. I'm looking to
 > minimize corona loss and sparkover while, at the same time, increasing the
 > safety factor (insulation) for both circuits. Let me describe each circuit
 > to give you an idea what I'm dealing with.
 >
 >          The first circuit is a six-stage Cockcroft-Walton voltage
 > multiplier circuit that takes 15 kV square wave input at 20 mA with a
 > frequency of around 20 kHz from a solid-state neon sign transformer. I may
 > scale this circuit back to have it output around 60 kV instead of around
90
 > kV.
 >
 >          I know as the number of stages in a multiplier increases, the
 > actual output voltage can change significantly according to the load.
 > Therefore, I'd like to be able to measure the output voltage using a
 > combination voltage divider and digital multimeter (with about 10 Meg
 > internal resistance). I've got some 200 Meg and 10 Meg  2% high voltage
 > resistors I want to stack to form the divider, but again I want to
minimize
 > corona loss and keep the exposed high voltage to a minimum.
 >
 >          I want to pot each circuit separately and I'm trying to balance
 > off several factors. Number one is cost, I want to keep things as cheap as
 > possible. I realize that submersing the circuits in mineral oil is one
 > relatively cheap way to go, but it's also pretty messy and I'd like to
 > steer clear of that method unless I have no other choice. Second, from
what
 > I've read, some epoxy-based potting compounds generate significant amounts
 > of heat during curing. Also, I've heard some types of RTV release
corrosive
 > chemicals while curing. So I'm looking for something that won't melt the
 > capacitors or digest the diodes in my multiplier. Third is reversibility (
 > is that a word?). If I blow a diode in the multiplier, it would be nice to
 > be able to un-pot the circuit to replace the failed component(s). By
unpot,
 > I mean anything from melt under low heat (if potting in paraffin) to
gently
 > chip off pieces of the potting compound. However, being able to unpot the
 > circuit is the lowest priority.
 >
 >          Does anyone know of any potting compounds that meet one or more
of
 > these requirements?
 >
 >
 >          Thanks in advance,
 >
 >          Rick Richter
 >
 >