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RE: where to put the coil guts



Original poster: "Jim DeLillo by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <jimdel-at-bellatlantic-dot-net>

Thanks to all those that replied.

I asked because I thought it would be great if you isolate the noise of the
spark gap
an/or just mount the coil anywhere you want.  It would seem to be more
magical (if that's possible) to have the coil
producing sparks "on its own".

<< Jim >>

-----Original Message-----
From: Tesla list [mailto:tesla-at-pupman-dot-com]
Sent: Saturday, September 07, 2002 4:37 PM
To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
Subject: Re: where to put the coil guts


Original poster: "Wells Campbell by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
<wellscampbell-at-onebox-dot-com>

Hi jim,

In short, yes, it is more lossy. You want the tank circuit to be as
physically
small as possible, so that the energy doesn't have to travel very far
as it rings through the primary tank circuit. This includes the primary
coil, the caps, and the spark gap. That being said, everything else can
be rather far away without too much problem, many coils are done with
the power supply feeding the coil and "guts" through welding cable or
other longish appropriately shielded cord.

Once you have the primary guts all arranged, however, most find that
it is just easier and more space-efficient to put all of the rest of
the HV components there, and run the mains current in, leaving the mains
controls in a more remote location.

Cheers,


Wells Campbell
wellscampbell-at-onebox-dot-com


Original poster: "Jim DeLillo by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
 <jimdel-at-bellatlantic-dot-net>

 Aside from portability, why does everybody put the "guts" of the coil
 in a
 base underneath?
 Is it possible to place them remote from the coil(s), like in a separate
 room? or are the losses too great?
 Or other issues like running long lengths of HV cable being dangerous?

 Just curious.

 << Jim >>


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