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Resonance Circuits and Resonance Systems

Started by hartiberlin, March 15, 2016, 03:27:11 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Belfior

More coil related questions:

I can find out the resonant freq of a primary, by using this method:

http://www.hvtesla.com/img/tesla%20coil%20tuning_prim.jpg

Then I can make the secondary so that it also resonates with that frequency.

Now what if I have a 15kV flyback transformer to drive the primary? How do I measure my primary to resonate to the freq that the flyback produces? Or do I just connect a cap and spark gap to the circuit and change the cap values to find the resonance? What methods can I use to find that resonance, because I can't just connect an oscilloscope to a coil that has 15kV running through it? If I use another coil, maybe just few turns, and hold it near the primary. I can see spikes, but doesn't this just show the resonant freq of the short coil that i'm holding and not the primary's resonance?


Belfior

Trying to make a transistor switch this circuit automatically to get over 100V from a 6.5V DC battery.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVK84Z8BSnc

Would appreciate if someone could take a poke at this maybe with

https://www.circuitlab.com

and no I would not like to use a voltage doubler, tesla coil, joule thief or any method to raise voltage. Just an automatic switch for this solution on the video.

My current non-working idea is at https://www.circuitlab.com/circuit/szm2y68b4wqt/voltage-pump/

and yes I am not an electrician. My idea was to zap the coil to the battery negative using the transistor's collector and emitter. When they conduct base loses voltage and shuts of collector&emitter. Resulting magnetic field in the coil collapses and the energy has no place to go but the cap

TinselKoala

You're on the right track, sort of.

Google "disposable camera schematic", and have fun.

But be careful, you can get a powerful shock or even damage your skin.

Belfior

Quote from: TinselKoala on October 30, 2017, 10:22:33 PM
You're on the right track, sort of.

Google "disposable camera schematic", and have fun.

But be careful, you can get a powerful shock or even damage your skin.

Whaaat! No way! Maybe small resistor on the collector side also and test this by attaching a gas discharge tube and a lamp over the capacitor. This way the high voltage would ZAP to something. hopefully