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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,sci.electronics.design
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Ignoramus27088 wrote:
After looking at HV resistors on ebay, I realized that I may have a couple in my junk pile (pieces from a radar test set). Will check tonight. There are probably 5 kV rated, but I could put 2 in series. i For the discharge resistor, leave your self some margin. If 5KV rated, put three identical ones in series if you are testing at 9 to 10 KV. What procedure are you proposing to non violently check the caps are actually discharged? Personally I'd want to know they were fully discharged (well past 99%) before handling them. Also does your plan include checking the HV probe after use before relying on it to indicate they are safe? Insulation can be a problem, beware of surface leakage, all surfaces need to be extremely clean and absolutely dry. I've used glass up to about 35KV with a grounded guard ring (in case there is a flaw I haven't spotted) with no trouble so if you have a large enough quartz glass tube that should be suitable to hold the resistors. Some uncolored plastics are also suitable for high voltage work. There is no way you'd get me using wood unless it was freshly kiln dried then vacuum impregnated with paraffin wax. Corona discharge can also be a real problem. It shouldn't be TOO bad at 10KV but you still want to be really carefull to get nice smooth connections with no sharp edges or points. High voltage har a really annoying way of finding the slightest weakness or pinhole in any insulation and many TVs have had a fine fireworks display from the side of the LOPT on my bench. Its a bit inconvenient if one is just trying to get the TV powered up successfully to decide if its condition is good enough to justify LOPT replacement but with your setup it's potentially lethal. Its also important to confirm the integrity of the grounding wires in your test circuit. I left off the ground lead to the aquadag on a large screen TV by mistake ONCE, (in 12 years) now I'm rather cautious. You goof up your grouding, yoy'd better allready have got a good deal on a pine box . . . Wild wacky and way out there idea!! Does anyone have any idea if a suitable length of carbon core vehicle ignition cable would make a satisfactory bleeder resistor? Iggy would be dumping 100 joules into it, its got distributed resistance and sufficient insulation so the main worry is can a maneagable length take the peak power? -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* SPAM TRAP set in header, Use email address in sig. if you must. |
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