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Re: pole pig beginner



Original poster: Vardan <vardan01@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Hi,

The pig is over rated and there is a short term overload spec for those things. I don't know what it is right off. You could easily do 20, probably 25 and 30kVA would be getting "bad". Your wiring and house circuit breakers will blow first unless you do something to them ;-)

Of course, if the pig is old or there is a wiring weakness, something might blow too... So there is a risk... I think Kevin blew his utility transformer up if I remember right:

http://home.flash.net/~kreld/biggg.htm

The power company rushed right out and fixed it...

Cheers,

        Terry



At 10:30 AM 7/26/2006, you wrote:
I was thinking about this overnight and I came up with another question. you said if I didn't limit the current to the pig that it would try to draw approx. 700 amps. This next quote here is form Chip in the previous post:

"It's unlikely you'll pull 200A from your coil, but if
you
do, the pig that powers your house will be ok if you don't do it for
very
long (long being in hours or so)."
I don't plan on running a coil for hours. I'm aiming for minutes. So my question is given a big enough MMC bank and the right current reactor is it possible to pull more than 15 KVA from the pig that powers my house? Again I wouldn't plan on doing this for more than 5 minutes or so. My first thought was no. but after reading your post and hearing from everyone that pole pigs are almost indestructible I'm thinking that maybe it could be done. As always all input is appreciated. Thanks
Tesla list <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Original poster: "Dr. Resonance"


We have 10 kVA pole xmfrs that run on 220 VAC, not 440 VAC. Some of
the large industrial units usually in large quarries, chemical plans,
industrial metal working plants, etc, do actually run on 440 VAC. If
you only have 220 VAC at your home, do not use this type of xmfr.

I have the correct xmfr you need, a standard 220 vac to 14.4 kV 10
kVA pole xmfr.

As with any pole xmfr, a series 220 vac primary current reactor is
required to keep the maximum current from exceeding the value your
capacitor bank requires. With a typical setup, a .05 to .08 uF cap
bank requires 30 to 50 Amps on the 220 volt side. Your series power
reactor must limit the maximum current to this value. Best test is
to set up a climbing arc or just short out the 14.4 kV (HV) side of
the xmfr and then use a variac to bring in the power slowly. The
reactor is adjusted to match the current you require.

If you don't use a reactor at all the xmfr will try to draw approx
700 Amps and blow your breakers! The current must be limited.

The 15 kVA xmfr is the max. continuous current that your house pole
xmfr can supply. If everything else in the house is shut off, you
can draw the full 15 kVA for short periods of time. Be sure to shut
off current hogs such as stoves, elec. hot water heaters, and clothes
dryers when you run a large coil. A full 15 kVA will probably match
up well with a 24 inch dia. coil running a 40 x 12 inch toroid and a
0.15 to 0.20 uF 50 kV capacitor bank.

When you build a big coil be prepared in advance to spend big bucks
for all the necessary parts to do it right.

We sell the xmfrs for $125.00 if you need one --- I have 60 of them in stock.

Dr. Resonance



>Hi guys, I called this guy Gary told us about in the "pole chicken"
>thread about some transformers and it seems he doesn't really know
>what he has. This makes for a bad buying situation because I don't
>really know what I need. I've built 2 coils prior to this one and
>they we're both NST powered. I wanted to make the jump to pole pigs
>but the more I look for answers the more questions I come up with.
>
>1. I told him I wanted a 10KVA pole mount distribution transformer
>and he insist that they run on 480V. I really don't know. Do they?
>
>2. From what I'm told I have 240V coming into my house at 200A. The
>pole pig that powers my house has a 15 stamped on it that I can only
>assume refers to 15KVA. If that is the case I should be able to buy
>a 15 KVA pig and have just enough power to run it if nothing in the
>house is running. Is this right?
>
>3. I'm 99% sure that I wouldn't be able to run anything over 15 KVA
>meaning it would serve no purpose to buy one bigger than that or
>more than one 15KVA. However you guys have suprised me before so if
>anyone knows something I don't on this issue please tell me.
>
> If you guys could please clarify some of my assumptions and tell
> me exactly what I need so I can buy from this guy with confidence I
> would realy appreciate it.
>
>





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