TSSP: List Archives

From: Paul
Date: Thu, 26 Sep 2002 21:59:02 +0100
Subject: [TSSP] Various

Hi All,

It's been a while since I posted anything so I thought I'd
better say hello, and apologise to the several people who
have sent me emails and not had replies.  They've all been
read and acted upon, but I've just not had the time to respond.

Work has been pretty busy, as usual.  Haven't had much time
for TC work, the odd bit of coding, that's all.

I'm still reeling from our initial observations of breakout
voltage.  I can't fault Terry's measurements and we're forced
to face the fact that his sphere seems to be breaking out at
between 2 and 5 times higher potential than we thought it would.
I'll have to go back over the surface field calculations to make
sure nothing's messed up in there.

Before going any further,  I think it's time for me to try
to understand just what the difference is between streamers
and leaders, which I'm not at all clear on.  I just use the
word 'streamer' to cover everything.

As regards the quiz, I've had quite a few positive comments
and several people have lodged answers with me, although I
haven't officially launched the quiz.  I'm hanging on until
I get a spell in which I can cope with the correspondence!
Don't let that discourage anyone from sending in answers,
they will be saved at this end, but I need to check a few
things first, and also disambiguate the rules a bit.

Greg Leyh wrote:

> Awhile back I was toying with the idea of connecting a
> capacitor across the lower 1/6th or so of the secondary
> turns, in order to convert the coil into a kind of
> 'hybrid' coil -- somewher e between a standard and a
> magnifier configuration....
> ...I'm now wondering if this hybrid arrangement might
> help smooth out the secondary voltage stress factor,
> as well.

That's an interesting idea.  Perhaps downward going
transients resulting from step changes in top voltage will
be swallowed by such a capacitor, thus protecting the
already well-stressed lower part of the coil.  That sounds
well worth trying to model, and we have the technology.
As soon as I get the chance I'll setup a model of that and
see how it responds.  At the very least it might make a
kind of 'safety gap' for the secondary - a deliberate
weak point for controlled secondary breakdown.

Well, that's all for now,
--
Paul Nicholson,
--


Maintainer Paul Nicholson, paul@abelian.demon.co.uk.