| On Jul 19, 2004, at 9:27 AM, Traian wrote:
 
 
 When a fuse is destroyed during a fault, it failed to do it's job of 
interrupting current flow without creating a metal vapor arc.  Thus, a 
more capable fuse is needed.
 "Ian White, G3SEK" wrote:
 
 
 Oleg Skydan wrote:
Good call - you have to think about the maximum current that the 
crowbarOK. Consider I have a 40 uF capacitor in the PS charged to 3000V
(one that uses in the pulse laser PS). Will it be safe for electronic
crowbar to discharge it ? 
 will have to handle. The OE5JFL circuit is quite carefully designed to
 limit that peak current, using a combination of a small inductor to
 limit the rate of rise, and also a 10R sense resistor. (The inductor 
is
 only 30ft of wire, random-wound on a bobbin, but it makes a very
 significant difference. It also means that the 10R sense resistor
 doesn't have to be built like a conventional glitch resistor.)
 
 Bottom line: if you're going to copy OE5JFL's circuit, copy *all* of 
it.
 
 http://www.qsl.net/oe5jfl/flashover.htm
 The Harris RF-110A uses a similar circuit for protecting the screen 
circuit
 from tube flash over discharge (R series resistor at the bottom of the
 screen's
 regulating string of zener which act a SCR; all of the tubes screens - 
two
 8122 drivers and two 4CX1500B finals- are OR connected by diode at
 the SCR anode). It saved me the entire power zener string once, when
 I had to verify a 4CX1500B (the tube was verified ok at hi pot before,
 but the big bang occurred anyway and destroyed the RF124's PS HV fuse).
 
 
 
 AG6K
 
 
 _______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps 
 |