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Re: Poking wires into secondary



Original poster: "Michael and Debbie Russell" <mickndeb-at-westserv-dot-net.au> 


----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2003 4:18 AM
Subject: Re: Poking wires into secondary


 > Original poster: Mike <megavolts61-at-yahoo-dot-com>
 >
 > My favorite trick is to use a 1/4 wall thickness pvc pipe then take a very
 > small drill bit (just a bit larger than the wire) and drill into the pipe
 > at a very shallow angle.  then drill a mirror image hole to create a V
 > shaped channel in the wall......without punching all the way through.
Then
 > once the coil is wound, you can slip the end of the wire into it and use
 > pvc cement to permanently hold the wire in place....I also cement a flat,
 > circular piece of pvc onto the top of the coil form to help prevent
 > internal arcing.
 >     I use pvc bolts for the ground connection....glued into the bottom of
 > the form.  Finally, for my connections to the topload and the ground
 > strap,  I sand off the ends of the wires then make a 'spiral coil' around
a
 > 1/4 in. rod(to allow it to slip over a 1/4 in bolt) and then solder the
 > coil, so that it is like a washer and has a decent surface contact with
the
 > topload/ground.
 > Mike
 >
 >

Hi everyone, I'm new to the list and know very little about building but I
have something to add here.  The solder in these type of connections, being
nice and soft tends to migrate over time and with vibration.  This can cause
pre-soldered connections to come loose at the most inoportune moments and
suffer greatly from thermal damage.  I prefer to hard crimp a lug onto my
cable ends and then solder that in place if I want extra security.  Thanks
for your patience.

 >
 >