oscillator
Hi Mike,
Hook up a FWB instead of your doubler or tripler. Now hook it up with four plugs or however many you can - 8 maybe. And see if you get consistent spark over a range that way at first. If it works with just the FWB then the problem is with the doubler/tripler. I know that the doubler has to have the capacity for the power throughput. I get much above 3500 RPM and my doubler takes a drastic fall-off but the output of the oscillator stays put. Can you look at the output of the oscillator on a scope? It's possible that the oscillator is screaming at too high a frequency to be efficient. I have 10,000 uF pairs on mine and it's frequency is around 88 Hz. What's you transformer ratings again? Mine is 115 x 5 @ 4.8A (parallel) or 115 x 10 @ 2.4A (series with center tap). Mine runs 6 - 8 Amps just sitting there ... and I don't care 'cause it don't blow up like my inverters did.
I think the issue is frequency and the trippler. As the voltage goes up, the amperage drops proportionately (or even more). Try your larger caps when you get them, drop back down to a doubler and don't worry about the power draw ... I don't ... right now.
I am so pleased with mine I can't tell ya'. I hope this helps some. It will work for you just fine once you get it dialed in.
Peace,
Greg
Originally posted by jstadwater
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Hook up a FWB instead of your doubler or tripler. Now hook it up with four plugs or however many you can - 8 maybe. And see if you get consistent spark over a range that way at first. If it works with just the FWB then the problem is with the doubler/tripler. I know that the doubler has to have the capacity for the power throughput. I get much above 3500 RPM and my doubler takes a drastic fall-off but the output of the oscillator stays put. Can you look at the output of the oscillator on a scope? It's possible that the oscillator is screaming at too high a frequency to be efficient. I have 10,000 uF pairs on mine and it's frequency is around 88 Hz. What's you transformer ratings again? Mine is 115 x 5 @ 4.8A (parallel) or 115 x 10 @ 2.4A (series with center tap). Mine runs 6 - 8 Amps just sitting there ... and I don't care 'cause it don't blow up like my inverters did.
I think the issue is frequency and the trippler. As the voltage goes up, the amperage drops proportionately (or even more). Try your larger caps when you get them, drop back down to a doubler and don't worry about the power draw ... I don't ... right now.
I am so pleased with mine I can't tell ya'. I hope this helps some. It will work for you just fine once you get it dialed in.
Peace,
Greg
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