Originally posted by pvar06
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"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Resistor
Hi,
Thanks for reply.
Yesterday late night I have used various resistors on one of the transistor. Following are the testing
1. 100 Ohm 2 watt resistor was heating up too much.
2. 100 Ohm 2 Watt and 180 Ohm 2 Watt placed in parallel. But this was taking power around 3.4 Amps. Also resistor was heating much.
3. 100 K 1/2 W resistor was not oscillating the coil.
4. Finally placed 1k 1/2 Watt [2 Nos] in parallel. With this circuit was oscillating and running cool.
But morning when i have checked the battery then the battery has not gone above 12.71 volts [the last reading was at 200 hrs in night which was 12.71 volts], So virtually there was not much change between 200 hrs to 900 hrs [Morning].
Do I need to place the resistor on each transistors used in the circuit or any one will be ok.
Tonight I will try other values like 10k, 20k etc.
Regards
Praveen
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Originally posted by pvar06 View PostHi,
Thanks for reply.
Yesterday late night I have used various resistors on one of the transistor. Following are the testing
1. 100 Ohm 2 watt resistor was heating up too much.
2. 100 Ohm 2 Watt and 180 Ohm 2 Watt placed in parallel. But this was taking power around 3.4 Amps. Also resistor was heating much.
3. 100 K 1/2 W resistor was not oscillating the coil.
4. Finally placed 1k 1/2 Watt [2 Nos] in parallel. With this circuit was oscillating and running cool.
But morning when i have checked the battery then the battery has not gone above 12.71 volts [the last reading was at 200 hrs in night which was 12.71 volts], So virtually there was not much change between 200 hrs to 900 hrs [Morning].
Do I need to place the resistor on each transistors used in the circuit or any one will be ok.
Tonight I will try other values like 10k, 20k etc.
Regards
Praveen"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Resistor and report
Hi Seph and all,
Thanks for your post.
I have tried various resistors on transistor. The 10k was not oscillating the coil, however 100ohm was getting overheated. So finally placed 500ohm (2 Nos 1k 1w resistor in parallel) on each transistor. So every thing is working fine and cool.
I have kept a bettery on this circuit. Today morning i have ocmpleted 33 hrs of charging. The battery voltage immidiately climbs upto the 13.99-14.05 volts (within 1 hours of charging). The details are as given below:
1. During charging time the battery voltage abserved in range of 13.99 to 14.05 volts.
2. When circuit is switched off then the battery voltage observed was 13.27 volts but constantly going down.
3. I have kept the battery for 30 minutes away from the circuit. The voltage dropped from 13.27 volts to 12.56 volts.
4. During the charging process seen lot of bubbles are coming out from the battery cells. Earlier the bubbles was big now they are becoming more finer (i think it is due to removal of sulphate layer from top edge of electrode plates). So this gives me satisfaction that atleast something is happening.
5. When I took the battery, it was completely dead. During that time i have seen lot of white deposit on top edge of the battery electrodes. Now after 33-34 hrs charging the quantity of white deposit is getting reduced.
6. During the charging I could not see any improvement in the gravity of the battery.
I dont know, what kind of charging is taking place. Have some little hope as the battery is bubbling and white layer is being removed. But concerned about no increase in the gravity.
Any ideas - What is happening inside the battery.
Regards
Praveen
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Originally posted by pvar06 View PostHi Seph and all,
Thanks for your post.
I have tried various resistors on transistor. The 10k was not oscillating the coil, however 100ohm was getting overheated. So finally placed 500ohm (2 Nos 1k 1w resistor in parallel) on each transistor. So every thing is working fine and cool.
I have kept a bettery on this circuit. Today morning i have ocmpleted 33 hrs of charging. The battery voltage immidiately climbs upto the 13.99-14.05 volts (within 1 hours of charging). The details are as given below:
1. During charging time the battery voltage abserved in range of 13.99 to 14.05 volts.
2. When circuit is switched off then the battery voltage observed was 13.27 volts but constantly going down.
3. I have kept the battery for 30 minutes away from the circuit. The voltage dropped from 13.27 volts to 12.56 volts.
4. During the charging process seen lot of bubbles are coming out from the battery cells. Earlier the bubbles was big now they are becoming more finer (i think it is due to removal of sulphate layer from top edge of electrode plates). So this gives me satisfaction that atleast something is happening.
5. When I took the battery, it was completely dead. During that time i have seen lot of white deposit on top edge of the battery electrodes. Now after 33-34 hrs charging the quantity of white deposit is getting reduced.
6. During the charging I could not see any improvement in the gravity of the battery.
I dont know, what kind of charging is taking place. Have some little hope as the battery is bubbling and white layer is being removed. But concerned about no increase in the gravity.
Any ideas - What is happening inside the battery.
Regards
Praveen"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Originally posted by pvar06 View PostHi Seph,
I am testing 12 Volt 35 Ah battery. For measuring the oscillator current draw I have installed a analog ampere meter in series at input side. This meter is constantly showing 2 Amps.
Regards
Praveen"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Hi Speh,
Actually there was no way in Jetijs circuit by which I can adjust the current draw to the circuit. So just running it as it is.
I am just hoping that the battery is getting desulpheted as lot of bubbles are coming out from the cells.
Regards
Praveen
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Originally posted by pvar06 View PostHi Speh,
Actually there was no way in Jetijs circuit by which I can adjust the current draw to the circuit. So just running it as it is.
I am just hoping that the battery is getting desulpheted as lot of bubbles are coming out from the cells.
Regards
Praveen
Make sure it is rated for enough wattage though.
Cheers Steve
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Hi folks, I'm reading over this thread and I noticed Jetijs's circuit looks like a Joule Thief only without toroid. With my JT, the transistor gets way hotter than it should using only a darlington pair in this case, so thats why I'm using just a 555 to pulse my coils. Is Jetjs having this problem or maybe its because I'm using a bifilar with 18 gauge wire, which may be too much for the base of the transistor or the voltage aspect. And no raising base resistor only increases frequency and still gets darn hot. The 555 pulser is working great, though i would rather have a self oscillator that worked without overheating transistors. Any thoughts appreciated.
peace love light
Tyson
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Adjusting the wattage
Originally posted by dambit View PostSure there is, just use a variable resistor in place of a fixed one infront of the base. I do it all the time. This way I can adjust my charger for all battery sizes.
Make sure it is rated for enough wattage though.
Cheers Steve
I now have 10 transistors setup with the Jetijs setup, I have found heavy resistors out of old TV's that I match up depending on what I need. The only problem I have found with this setup is that I need to jump start it to get it going.
I am using about 120 watts of solar panels to feed the setup to charge my semi batteries. I use a large cap on the front of the setup to buffer for the clouds.
Again the Jetijs setup rocks it is a Joule Thief on steriodsSee my experiments here...
http://www.youtube.com/marthale7
You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.
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RE: hot coils.
Originally posted by SkyWatcher View PostHi folks, I'm reading over this thread and I noticed Jetijs's circuit looks like a Joule Thief only without toroid. With my JT, the transistor gets way hotter than it should using only a darlington pair in this case, so thats why I'm using just a 555 to pulse my coils. Is Jetjs having this problem or maybe its because I'm using a bifilar with 18 gauge wire, which may be too much for the base of the transistor or the voltage aspect. And no raising base resistor only increases frequency and still gets darn hot. The 555 pulser is working great, though i would rather have a self oscillator that worked without overheating transistors. Any thoughts appreciated.
peace love light
Tyson
A trick I found handy is to use speaker wire in series it helps to curb most of the heat.See my experiments here...
http://www.youtube.com/marthale7
You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.
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Hi theremart, thanks for reply. Do you mean air-core. Also you suggest upping the resistance of coil by making it longer, do you think my transistors peak amperage is being exceeded causing the transistor overheating, because the coils don't get hot, just the transistor. And when I run the same darlington pair on the 555 with the same coil the transistor does not get anywhere near the same temperature, that is why i think it has to do with the on-time pulse being too long or something and maybe that is why increasing the resistance of the coil is working for you. That is whats odd about this, is that even when increasing the base resistor, sure the amp draw goes down but the heat in the transistor is still fairly high in the heat sink. I mean if it is just pulse on-time duration being too long then one would think the lower input amps should help reduce heat in transistor. Thoughts appreciated.
peace love light
Tyson
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Originally posted by SkyWatcher View PostHi theremart, thanks for reply. Do you mean air-core. Also you suggest upping the resistance of coil by making it longer, do you think my transistors peak amperage is being exceeded causing the transistor overheating, because the coils don't get hot, just the transistor. And when I run the same darlington pair on the 555 with the same coil the transistor does not get anywhere near the same temperature, that is why i think it has to do with the on-time pulse being too long or something and maybe that is why increasing the resistance of the coil is working for you. That is whats odd about this, is that even when increasing the base resistor, sure the amp draw goes down but the heat in the transistor is still fairly high in the heat sink. I mean if it is just pulse on-time duration being too long then one would think the lower input amps should help reduce heat in transistor. Thoughts appreciated.
peace love light
Tyson
Heat can build up in the transistor if switching speed is to slow or isn't turning fully on.
When the transistor is fully "on" the transistor has surprisingly low impedance and so very little energy gets dissipated as heat. Though during the transition between the on/off state the transistor has significant impedance and there is significant current flowing through it so if the on/off time is too slow alot more heat will build up.
This could be because your frequency is too high, or the resistor on the trigger winding is too high (if you are using a trigger winding). But I would guess it is because the 555 circuit doesn't provide a sharp enough transition..."Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Hi Sephiroth, No, the 555 timer pulser is the good setup. The one thats overheating the transistor is the Joule Thief circuit. thanks for the info though Seph, The transistor not turning fully on was my next guess as to why the JT circuit is overheating the trans.
I'm having great results with the 555 and its ability to be adjusted more.
peace love light
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