Весело там, в соседних гаражах.🤪😆 А русский язык Даниил учи, пригодится!😉
@Muhammadqosimpk120005 ай бұрын
Wow youe jenius i like
@Newlife-ol6pk9 ай бұрын
Nice! But i don't know how you can stay in the room with that huge amount of ozone..I made a small one and it stinks...
@solarsynapse9 ай бұрын
Looks like higher BPS makes larger bolts. What is the maximum?
@user-ji3gc2tp5m9 ай бұрын
Hello, dear friend. You made a very beautiful Tesla. I have a few questions? 1- What is the diameter of the wire, the number of wires and the type of wire in the second and first coil? 2- Can I get your WhatsApp number? 3-How many amperes is the output current of each transformer? 4- How many watts do you use? Sorry, my English is not very good
@ancientlink010 ай бұрын
love from portugal. epic build
@russellweidler696410 ай бұрын
That is a nice coil. I wished I could build one this large. Mine is small in comparison
@Milanlake11 ай бұрын
Ду юу спик энглиш?
@stephaniefameli1937 Жыл бұрын
You haven’t posted a video after this if you are alive pinn me
@jameshicks7125 Жыл бұрын
Very nice build! I am envious of all the great parts you put this together with.
@michaelstern519 Жыл бұрын
Cool ! , very good job, super interesting, thats awesome ⚡beautiful ⚡ incredible⚡
@ridefast0 Жыл бұрын
First, thank you for making such a clear and informative video about your impressive coil. You definitely need more space to test its spark length, can you go outside? I am sure you would get strong ground strikes. If your power does not trip with no variac then I suppose you don't need one, but ... not sure I would want to be in the same room for full-power starts every time! Could you say which component is limiting the power throughput, i.e. what is acting as your ballast to limit the power pulled from your wall socket?
@daniilfrolov3205 Жыл бұрын
Hi ridefast0! In this video power is mainly limited by the resistance of the high voltage transformer primary/secondary windings, there is essentially no separate ballast in this setup!
@ElkoSpace Жыл бұрын
Hehe, very nice!😄
@chrisv-l3835 Жыл бұрын
Only just found this now. But glad I did . That was an incredible display thank you for sharing.
@chabhishek32822 жыл бұрын
Why do you need that much amount of kV from a transistor?
@CarsonCreatesStuff2 жыл бұрын
This is by far the coolest coil I've seen. Is there anywhere I can find the dimensions and specs of this coil? i.e. Turns and wire diameter on the primary and secondary, what the toroid is made of and dimensions of it etc.... This is the perfect size and is exactly what I want to build.
@daniilfrolov3205 Жыл бұрын
Hi Carson! I don't have exact dimensions, however you will need to tune coil anyway... here are approximate dimensions: secondary diameter=11cm, height=80cm, wire diameter=0.5 mm. Toroid was made out of aluminum air duct.
@witoldbloch32912 жыл бұрын
Wow! Beatutiful sparks!
@electricalengineeringforkids2 жыл бұрын
Schematic?
@damny0utoobe2 жыл бұрын
Excellent rotary gap build. Solid and well thought out construction
@StephanieFameli2 жыл бұрын
You don’t have any other videos why is that?
@TonyXumik_2 жыл бұрын
Залипательно, эффектно. Но не забывай, что ты создаёшь этой катушкой сильные ЭМ помехи в рандомных диапазонах частот. Которые могут и на приличный радиус распространяться, если помещение не зкранировано. Это можно приравнять к радио-хулиганству, если не хуже. Это наказуемо. Поосторожнее.
@divinicus2 жыл бұрын
Good job checkoff
@dexterconnolly36962 жыл бұрын
Damm thats impressive.
@jodroboxes2 жыл бұрын
This really showcases why i love rotary gaps so much.
@mylestechnological70312 жыл бұрын
I would have gone with the DC design but AC would work as well but I did think your voice was a little funny seems like you had a really odd accent which is Russian accent I always find that accent kind of funny is it always seems like you're very confused most every Russian video they seemed a little confused speaking English
@mylestechnological70312 жыл бұрын
But you did do a remarkable good job I could have done slightly better just by 1%
@paulcorreggio49252 жыл бұрын
Throw the 3rd switch!!
@benjibts3 жыл бұрын
Wow! Awesome! It must absolutely terrifying to be in the same room when it's operating
@daniilfrolov32052 жыл бұрын
It is not that terrifying, the real danger is not in the sparks - it is in those two grey high voltage transformers that power primary coil with 10 kV. I got sparks discharged in my hands many times, it feels like a capacitor discharge, but it cannot burn your skin much. But those 10 kV transformers can actually fry you if something goes wrong.
@jovancabs3 жыл бұрын
Very nice spark good job idol
@haroutzeitounian41873 жыл бұрын
great job does it wotk without a ballast at the main power to limit over current build up to the transformer
@daniilfrolov32052 жыл бұрын
Yes, there is no ballast.
@SPD_Status_hindi273 жыл бұрын
Just wow bro this dream project
@user-qr3bn9it8m3 жыл бұрын
NICE🤔☝️🤪
@gerritdeniet62433 жыл бұрын
Great work Daniil!
@NicolasSalencPBP3 жыл бұрын
Great job! One question : is the current feeding into the caps AC or is it rectified? I didn't seem to notice a diode arrangement. Thanks!
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
It is AC!
@jakub38512 жыл бұрын
It actually doesn’t matter at higher frequencies than the mains since it charges multiple times during the mains pulse and then multiple times in negative voltage. I hope you understand what I mean
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
О том, как эта установка создавалась в выпуске подкаста "Где родился, там не пригодился" anchor.fm/galinaorg/episodes/---eo4s0l
@user-pt8uc6sm9y3 жыл бұрын
Добрый день, вы снимаете только на английском?
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
@@user-pt8uc6sm9y Нет, один раз снимали на русском :) instagram.com/tv/CJMDXe6pMJU/?igshid=xv0ok68xycyt
@virgilius19793 жыл бұрын
Big and noisy! :D Total power? (sorry if I missed your comment)
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
Total power from the line is order of 4 kVA (20A, 220V).
@EdwardTriesToScience3 жыл бұрын
Poking the components of the coil using a metal rod is scaring me alot, otherwise good demonstration
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
:)) good catch! This rod is made from tungsten by the way, and was used to make electrodes for spark gap, however copper seems to last longer!
@johnnycash40343 жыл бұрын
@@daniilfrolov3205 Why would copper last longer?
@luciferdastorres68543 жыл бұрын
woow the best sgtc ever.
@viacheslav47853 жыл бұрын
Great CRTC!
@pigstation91273 жыл бұрын
Are u a man
@postualin65513 жыл бұрын
Ahh thenclasical apark gap tesla coil my favorite Nice job To regulate the power of the tesla coil You need to control the Speed of the angle grinder
@tarasn.68923 жыл бұрын
)
@anderray97943 жыл бұрын
Wow the quality of your build is very impressive and the sound with the sparks that it's making while running are scary and fascinating at the same time hehe. I am currently building my first static spark gap tesla coil with microwave oven transformers but i dont have any equipment like osciloscope and function generator to measure the resonant frequencies and tune the tesla coil so I'am worried about the build.
@Luis-dn5mk3 жыл бұрын
Funktion Generator and oscilloscope aren't that expensive. You have to buy used and analog. I also try it with Mot's (i use five of them in series to reach 10kv primary). But you have to limit them, because they get really warm quickly.
@ridefast0 Жыл бұрын
For tuning, you can use just an LED (actually two LEDs back to back) in series with the output of a cheap function generator. Works great and is very accurate for any size coil. I made a YT video about that.
@MS_Lab3 жыл бұрын
Very Nice. What is the capacity of the high voltage capacitor?
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
Capacitor bank is 100 nF total (4x25 nF, 25 kV).
@jangruber423 жыл бұрын
Daniil: Let me turn of the lights here, so we can see it Tesla Coil: Hol on a second let me turn it on again! Great coil man, really like it! Currently I'm obsessed with Tesla Coils and all things that make high voltage! Gonna try building my second coil in the Christmas holidays (I'm 15 years old currently going to highschool). Having said that, I too like it being at home learning about electronics much more than being in school. Great Coil!!⚡
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
Dear J G, thank you for comment. I would recommend you to build VTTC based on GU-81 tube. If properly designed it can easily produce sparks up to 13 inches and longer. And you will not need rare parts such as spark gap and powerful capacitors.
@tristanlee11713 жыл бұрын
That's sick man, I'm first year engineering and I wanna build my own coil too. Where'd you get started? PS if you're building your own Tesla coil at 15 you gotta be pretty smart, don't get lazy in school. It pays off to work hard.
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
@@tristanlee1171 I started with vacuum tube Tesla coils for pragmatic reasons. It can produce relatively powerful sparks and you don't need very high voltage source in the primary. It doesn't need complex mechanical parts like rotary spark gap, at the same time it is very reliable comparing to solid state Tesla coils, and hard-to-break, and easy to debug.
@tristanlee11713 жыл бұрын
@@daniilfrolov3205 dope Where'd you get the materials for that?
@daveandrews66703 жыл бұрын
She's a beauty, just about to start on my first one. I read that 1 metre length of arc is about 1 million volts, you look like you,ve gotten there. cheers
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I wish you success in your experiments! 1 meter per 1 mega-volt is more valid for direct current but really very much depends on the shape of the electrodes. For spark gap Tesla coil power is very important, maybe even more important than secondary voltage. To get the longest sparks you want the rate to be as high as possible so the previous sparks will keep the ionization channel heated enough for the future sparks, allowing them to be longer with the same voltage level. But for high spark rate one needs to recharge the primary capacitor faster and this requires more average power.
@imeprezime12853 жыл бұрын
@@daniilfrolov3205 and what were minimum and maximum break rates in the experiments there?
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
@@imeprezime1285 My estimation is about 300 pulses per second at max.
@imeprezime12853 жыл бұрын
@@daniilfrolov3205 By the pitch sound I would say it is a good guess. For the minimum I would say 20-30. The sound in the video could be misleading though
@fakovfakov87873 жыл бұрын
kzread.info/dash/bejne/fmRsprqHodXZj9Y.html
@sneugler3 жыл бұрын
I really like the construction, very clean design. Don’t think I’ve ever heard of those “measurement transformers” before, are they pretty much small pole pigs wired in reverse to step up the voltage?
@daniilfrolov32053 жыл бұрын
Yes, these transformers are basically small pole pigs called NOM-10. However they are designed not for power applications, but for voltage measurement. They have calibrated voltage ratio of 100:1 and were used together with 100 V analog meter to monitor voltage up to 10 kV. They have significant over-voltage protection and really rated for much higher power than needed just for measurements, I estimate at least 2 kVA each.
Пікірлер
epic.
wow😮
Awesome! Great job!
Good job nice build 😊
Весело там, в соседних гаражах.🤪😆 А русский язык Даниил учи, пригодится!😉
Wow youe jenius i like
Nice! But i don't know how you can stay in the room with that huge amount of ozone..I made a small one and it stinks...
Looks like higher BPS makes larger bolts. What is the maximum?
Hello, dear friend. You made a very beautiful Tesla. I have a few questions? 1- What is the diameter of the wire, the number of wires and the type of wire in the second and first coil? 2- Can I get your WhatsApp number? 3-How many amperes is the output current of each transformer? 4- How many watts do you use? Sorry, my English is not very good
love from portugal. epic build
That is a nice coil. I wished I could build one this large. Mine is small in comparison
Ду юу спик энглиш?
You haven’t posted a video after this if you are alive pinn me
Very nice build! I am envious of all the great parts you put this together with.
Cool ! , very good job, super interesting, thats awesome ⚡beautiful ⚡ incredible⚡
First, thank you for making such a clear and informative video about your impressive coil. You definitely need more space to test its spark length, can you go outside? I am sure you would get strong ground strikes. If your power does not trip with no variac then I suppose you don't need one, but ... not sure I would want to be in the same room for full-power starts every time! Could you say which component is limiting the power throughput, i.e. what is acting as your ballast to limit the power pulled from your wall socket?
Hi ridefast0! In this video power is mainly limited by the resistance of the high voltage transformer primary/secondary windings, there is essentially no separate ballast in this setup!
Hehe, very nice!😄
Only just found this now. But glad I did . That was an incredible display thank you for sharing.
Why do you need that much amount of kV from a transistor?
This is by far the coolest coil I've seen. Is there anywhere I can find the dimensions and specs of this coil? i.e. Turns and wire diameter on the primary and secondary, what the toroid is made of and dimensions of it etc.... This is the perfect size and is exactly what I want to build.
Hi Carson! I don't have exact dimensions, however you will need to tune coil anyway... here are approximate dimensions: secondary diameter=11cm, height=80cm, wire diameter=0.5 mm. Toroid was made out of aluminum air duct.
Wow! Beatutiful sparks!
Schematic?
Excellent rotary gap build. Solid and well thought out construction
You don’t have any other videos why is that?
Залипательно, эффектно. Но не забывай, что ты создаёшь этой катушкой сильные ЭМ помехи в рандомных диапазонах частот. Которые могут и на приличный радиус распространяться, если помещение не зкранировано. Это можно приравнять к радио-хулиганству, если не хуже. Это наказуемо. Поосторожнее.
Good job checkoff
Damm thats impressive.
This really showcases why i love rotary gaps so much.
I would have gone with the DC design but AC would work as well but I did think your voice was a little funny seems like you had a really odd accent which is Russian accent I always find that accent kind of funny is it always seems like you're very confused most every Russian video they seemed a little confused speaking English
But you did do a remarkable good job I could have done slightly better just by 1%
Throw the 3rd switch!!
Wow! Awesome! It must absolutely terrifying to be in the same room when it's operating
It is not that terrifying, the real danger is not in the sparks - it is in those two grey high voltage transformers that power primary coil with 10 kV. I got sparks discharged in my hands many times, it feels like a capacitor discharge, but it cannot burn your skin much. But those 10 kV transformers can actually fry you if something goes wrong.
Very nice spark good job idol
great job does it wotk without a ballast at the main power to limit over current build up to the transformer
Yes, there is no ballast.
Just wow bro this dream project
NICE🤔☝️🤪
Great work Daniil!
Great job! One question : is the current feeding into the caps AC or is it rectified? I didn't seem to notice a diode arrangement. Thanks!
It is AC!
It actually doesn’t matter at higher frequencies than the mains since it charges multiple times during the mains pulse and then multiple times in negative voltage. I hope you understand what I mean
О том, как эта установка создавалась в выпуске подкаста "Где родился, там не пригодился" anchor.fm/galinaorg/episodes/---eo4s0l
Добрый день, вы снимаете только на английском?
@@user-pt8uc6sm9y Нет, один раз снимали на русском :) instagram.com/tv/CJMDXe6pMJU/?igshid=xv0ok68xycyt
Big and noisy! :D Total power? (sorry if I missed your comment)
Total power from the line is order of 4 kVA (20A, 220V).
Poking the components of the coil using a metal rod is scaring me alot, otherwise good demonstration
:)) good catch! This rod is made from tungsten by the way, and was used to make electrodes for spark gap, however copper seems to last longer!
@@daniilfrolov3205 Why would copper last longer?
woow the best sgtc ever.
Great CRTC!
Are u a man
Ahh thenclasical apark gap tesla coil my favorite Nice job To regulate the power of the tesla coil You need to control the Speed of the angle grinder
)
Wow the quality of your build is very impressive and the sound with the sparks that it's making while running are scary and fascinating at the same time hehe. I am currently building my first static spark gap tesla coil with microwave oven transformers but i dont have any equipment like osciloscope and function generator to measure the resonant frequencies and tune the tesla coil so I'am worried about the build.
Funktion Generator and oscilloscope aren't that expensive. You have to buy used and analog. I also try it with Mot's (i use five of them in series to reach 10kv primary). But you have to limit them, because they get really warm quickly.
For tuning, you can use just an LED (actually two LEDs back to back) in series with the output of a cheap function generator. Works great and is very accurate for any size coil. I made a YT video about that.
Very Nice. What is the capacity of the high voltage capacitor?
Capacitor bank is 100 nF total (4x25 nF, 25 kV).
Daniil: Let me turn of the lights here, so we can see it Tesla Coil: Hol on a second let me turn it on again! Great coil man, really like it! Currently I'm obsessed with Tesla Coils and all things that make high voltage! Gonna try building my second coil in the Christmas holidays (I'm 15 years old currently going to highschool). Having said that, I too like it being at home learning about electronics much more than being in school. Great Coil!!⚡
Dear J G, thank you for comment. I would recommend you to build VTTC based on GU-81 tube. If properly designed it can easily produce sparks up to 13 inches and longer. And you will not need rare parts such as spark gap and powerful capacitors.
That's sick man, I'm first year engineering and I wanna build my own coil too. Where'd you get started? PS if you're building your own Tesla coil at 15 you gotta be pretty smart, don't get lazy in school. It pays off to work hard.
@@tristanlee1171 I started with vacuum tube Tesla coils for pragmatic reasons. It can produce relatively powerful sparks and you don't need very high voltage source in the primary. It doesn't need complex mechanical parts like rotary spark gap, at the same time it is very reliable comparing to solid state Tesla coils, and hard-to-break, and easy to debug.
@@daniilfrolov3205 dope Where'd you get the materials for that?
She's a beauty, just about to start on my first one. I read that 1 metre length of arc is about 1 million volts, you look like you,ve gotten there. cheers
Thank you, I wish you success in your experiments! 1 meter per 1 mega-volt is more valid for direct current but really very much depends on the shape of the electrodes. For spark gap Tesla coil power is very important, maybe even more important than secondary voltage. To get the longest sparks you want the rate to be as high as possible so the previous sparks will keep the ionization channel heated enough for the future sparks, allowing them to be longer with the same voltage level. But for high spark rate one needs to recharge the primary capacitor faster and this requires more average power.
@@daniilfrolov3205 and what were minimum and maximum break rates in the experiments there?
@@imeprezime1285 My estimation is about 300 pulses per second at max.
@@daniilfrolov3205 By the pitch sound I would say it is a good guess. For the minimum I would say 20-30. The sound in the video could be misleading though
kzread.info/dash/bejne/fmRsprqHodXZj9Y.html
I really like the construction, very clean design. Don’t think I’ve ever heard of those “measurement transformers” before, are they pretty much small pole pigs wired in reverse to step up the voltage?
Yes, these transformers are basically small pole pigs called NOM-10. However they are designed not for power applications, but for voltage measurement. They have calibrated voltage ratio of 100:1 and were used together with 100 V analog meter to monitor voltage up to 10 kV. They have significant over-voltage protection and really rated for much higher power than needed just for measurements, I estimate at least 2 kVA each.