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Re: the back of secondary winding



Original poster: Tim S <stm800@xxxxxxxxxxx>

my 2cents:) no worth mutch i guess....something like bio degradable..simple green? soak then wash off with water? rebake in the sun..sucks tho if you live in the artic.
i can only set stuff maybe 3 months in the year,,by the sun.it is natural.
the rest of the time it is artifical baking and hoping i did it right.
but then i have a real job and it takes presenendance.

my spelling checker is on the blink...so srry  if mispelled...


ps. Dr.R,,
i will email ya about the flybacks and maybe me and you would chat on fone a bit?
nothing in a rush but it would be nice a day this week....or next week...tim



Tesla list <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Original poster: "Gates"

Dr.
To clean such oils off of the secondary coil what should one use not
to damage the urethane coating?
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tesla list"
To:
Sent: Monday, June 26, 2006 6:28 PM
Subject: Re: the back of secondary winding


>Original poster: "Dr. Resonance"
>
>
>The idea is to securely hold the windings in place while at the same
>time help seal the coil from any molecular atmospheric moisture
>adhesion --- a big problem with PVC tubes as it rears it's ugly head
>especially with VDGRF generators which will not tolerate
>tracking/leakage values above 5 uA without serious performance degradation.
>
>Molecular level moisture adhesion can become a serious problem
>especially at RF frequencies. Another serious problem most people
>ignore is the handling of wound coils. They handle them with their
>bare skin which contains a lot of oils rich with sodium compounds
>--- a very good conductor. Hand salt on any coil is really not the
>very best condition. Most coils will survive but some will fail.
>
>Don't wind a sec coil dripping wet with varnish. Allow the two
>coats to throughly dry prior to winding.
>
>Dr. Resonance
>
>
>
>>While anecdotal accounts vary, I'm not sure it's ever been demonstrated
>>that a coated coil will be insulation-wise more robust than a bare coil.
>>In a close-wound coil, since the space between turns is zero, you can't
>>gain anything beyond the enamel insulation. Mostly the coating serves
>>to keep the wire turns from shifting on the form, and it looks nice and
>>probably offers some degree of abrasion resistance.
>>
>>Trying to wind a secondary dripping-wet with varnish sounds like a
>>ticket to mess and frustration!
>>
>>Regards, Gary Lau
>>MA, USA
>>
>>
>>
>> > Original poster: Russell L Thornton
>> >
>> >
>> > Would someone kindly explain to me the process and purpose of
>> > varnishing the windings of the secondary? Specifically, it seems to
>> > me that when we are varnishing the coil form raw and letting that
>> > cure and then varnish again after we wind the wire then the back of
>> > the wire still remains vulnerable with just the enamel insulation of
>> > the wire. Of course this assumes close spaced winding. Or am I just
>> > not seeing the purpose of this exercise. If we were doing this for
>> > insulation purposes I would like to put a layer of varnish on the
>> > form mounted to the winding mechanism and while still wet wind the
>> > wire. What's up here?
>> >
>> > Russ,
>> > Monitoring Lightning at the Cape
>> >
>>
>
>
>