If your heating up that bad you are most likely wired up wrong.
Read closly
2 banks of batts, left and the right.
1 coil of wire with 3 windings with 2 point the start and the finish an OUTPUT and 2 primaries
Your left bank POWER goes into the Start of its winding and out the Finish.
Your right bank goes into the Finish and out of the Start.
On the OutPut wire you should see a AC signal and measure AC voltage. If the output goes through the bridge and the Voltage grows (IE 15 volt on the AC side, 18 volt on ht DC side) then you are defendantly wired wrong.
Thats the only suggestion I can give you since your not using an IC to do the switching. Your switching apparatus may not be shutting off the transistor fully or something.
When I had the smaller one setup I used the IC to drive 2 opto's in turn drove a Darlington with 2 MJL's. It worked fine but the IC assures it. Oscillators do not always act as one would expect. I have lit many fires in the early days trying different oscillator circuits.
Check your coil wiring.
Cheers
Matt
Read closly
2 banks of batts, left and the right.
1 coil of wire with 3 windings with 2 point the start and the finish an OUTPUT and 2 primaries
Your left bank POWER goes into the Start of its winding and out the Finish.
Your right bank goes into the Finish and out of the Start.
On the OutPut wire you should see a AC signal and measure AC voltage. If the output goes through the bridge and the Voltage grows (IE 15 volt on the AC side, 18 volt on ht DC side) then you are defendantly wired wrong.
Thats the only suggestion I can give you since your not using an IC to do the switching. Your switching apparatus may not be shutting off the transistor fully or something.
When I had the smaller one setup I used the IC to drive 2 opto's in turn drove a Darlington with 2 MJL's. It worked fine but the IC assures it. Oscillators do not always act as one would expect. I have lit many fires in the early days trying different oscillator circuits.
Check your coil wiring.
Cheers
Matt
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