To: | amps <amps@contesting.com> |
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Subject: | Re: [Amps] HV Fuses |
From: | Ron Youvan <ka4inm@tampabay.rr.com> |
Reply-to: | ka4inm@tampabay.rr.com |
Date: | Wed, 17 Feb 2010 09:07:03 -0500 |
List-post: | <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
> In the old car ignitions there was a capacitor in parallel between the > points. This was made to avoid an arc between the points when the point > were switching off 12 Volts into the coil primary. > What we are trying to avoid in an hV fuse is also an arc when the > circuit breaks (when the fuse melts). > So how about using an HV capacitor in parallel with the fuse? would that > keep an arc from appearing? > Anyone tried this? The reason and result are different. In Kettering ignition systems the capacitor was to resonate the coil at a lower frequency which produced a lower frequency sine wave spark Voltage, producing a first half wave that lasts longer than it would have if naturally tuned. It did prevent arcing at the "points" as a side effect. A capacitor across a fuse would carry a brief spike of current which would not be helpful. -- Ron KA4INM - I'm proud to be Chuck's pop! _______________________________________________ Amps mailing list Amps@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps |
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