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Jacobs Ladders & Stacking Transformers?

I've build a Jacob's Ladder with an old "Franceformer". The specs
are:

Input; 120 volts - 60 Hz. Output;14,000 volts- 30 Ma.

If I wanted a bigger show and had two identical transformers, could I
stack them for a bigger arc? Would this even be prudent? If not why
not?

If it would be possible, would I wire them in a series or parallel
configuration? If not why would it not work, and what are the
pottential hazzards?

Thanks in advance
 
T

Tom Biasi

Jan 1, 1970
0
I've build a Jacob's Ladder with an old "Franceformer". The specs
are:

Input; 120 volts - 60 Hz. Output;14,000 volts- 30 Ma.

If I wanted a bigger show and had two identical transformers, could I
stack them for a bigger arc? Would this even be prudent? If not why
not?

If it would be possible, would I wire them in a series or parallel
configuration? If not why would it not work, and what are the
pottential hazzards?

Thanks in advance
In theory you could wire them in series aiding and get the sum of the
voltages out.
In practice, realize that you are dealing with very high voltages. Your
wired connections need to be clean and the insulating material needs to be
rated for the voltages.
Be careful.
Tom
 
J

John O'Flaherty

Jan 1, 1970
0
I've build a Jacob's Ladder with an old "Franceformer". The specs
are:

Input; 120 volts - 60 Hz. Output;14,000 volts- 30 Ma.

If I wanted a bigger show and had two identical transformers, could I
stack them for a bigger arc? Would this even be prudent? If not why
not?

If it would be possible, would I wire them in a series or parallel
configuration? If not why would it not work, and what are the
pottential hazzards?

Since both primaries would be referenced to the same point, I think
the stress on the transformer insulation would be doubled, and one or
the other might short out. I.E., suppose you ground one end of one of
the secondaries; then the most remote point from that ground reaches
sqrt(2)*28kV = 40kV peak, across insulation designed for half that,
within the second transformer.
 
B

Bob Eld

Jan 1, 1970
0
I've build a Jacob's Ladder with an old "Franceformer". The specs
are:

Input; 120 volts - 60 Hz. Output;14,000 volts- 30 Ma.

If I wanted a bigger show and had two identical transformers, could I
stack them for a bigger arc? Would this even be prudent? If not why
not?

If it would be possible, would I wire them in a series or parallel
configuration? If not why would it not work, and what are the
pottential hazzards?

Thanks in advance

In a word NO! Most likely the 14,000 volt secondary is center taped with the
center connected to the case. This makes it 7,000 volts to the case from
either terminal. There is no practical way to series windings from two
transformers without breaking the center connections. Secondly, if they
could be series'd there is insufficient insulation in the windings,
terminals, etc. for the resutant 28kV. The best solution is to get a 30kV
sign transformer. Keep in mind that these sign transformers are magnetically
current limited so they can withstand the heavy load of an arcing jacobs
later. High voltage transformers that are not so protected are very
dangerous and are not suitable for an arcing application. They can blow
breakers, burn your house down or worse. Be careful.
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
I've build a Jacob's Ladder with an old "Franceformer". The specs
are:

Input; 120 volts - 60 Hz. Output;14,000 volts- 30 Ma.

If I wanted a bigger show and had two identical transformers, could I
stack them for a bigger arc? Would this even be prudent? If not why
not?

If it would be possible, would I wire them in a series or parallel
configuration? If not why would it not work, and what are the
pottential hazzards?

Just off the top of my head, I'd say it'd be incredibly stupid. With 14 KV
at 30 mA, you could make a Jacob's Ladder that could go two stories high -
it depends on the physical design of the Jacob's Ladder. Once you start
the arc, as long as it's arcing, it's a negative resistance - the only
thing that will limit the size of the arc is your ballast. (which, AIUI,
neon sign transformers have built-in, which might be a snag.)

But stacking those kind of transformers can be lethal, if you don't
know _exactly_ what you're doing.

(I suppose you could put them in a big box and pot them, but from that
point you're on your own. =:-O )

Good Luck!
Rich
 
J

John Popelish

Jan 1, 1970
0
Rich said:
Just off the top of my head, I'd say it'd be incredibly stupid. With 14 KV
at 30 mA, you could make a Jacob's Ladder that could go two stories high -
it depends on the physical design of the Jacob's Ladder. Once you start
the arc, as long as it's arcing, it's a negative resistance - the only
thing that will limit the size of the arc is your ballast. (which, AIUI,
neon sign transformers have built-in, which might be a snag.)

But stacking those kind of transformers can be lethal, if you don't
know _exactly_ what you're doing.

(I suppose you could put them in a big box and pot them, but from that
point you're on your own. =:-O )

I think that if the two transformers are the same model, you
can wire both primaries and secondaries in parallel, and the
transformers will work okay. You don't get a bit more open
circuit voltage, but you get twice the arc current that will
produce a hotter arc that will climb a wider gap. Each
transformer should protect itself from the effective short
of the arc.
 
D

Don Klipstein

Jan 1, 1970
0
I've build a Jacob's Ladder with an old "Franceformer". The specs
are:

Input; 120 volts - 60 Hz. Output;14,000 volts- 30 Ma.

If I wanted a bigger show and had two identical transformers, could I
stack them for a bigger arc? Would this even be prudent? If not why
not?

If it would be possible, would I wire them in a series or parallel
configuration? If not why would it not work, and what are the
pottential hazzards?

There are some transformers out there that don't stack in series well
because the secondaries have points somewhere or somewhere else either not
too well insulated from, or outright connected to, the primary.

An example is neon sign transformers. Most have secondaries with their
center taps connected to the case. I doubt the insulation between the
primary and the case withstands reliably, maybe usually not at all, half
the secondary voltage.
If you put two neon sign transformers in series, their cases will have
one full secondary voltage between them. Even powering the primaries with
isolation transformers can be a problem if interwinding capacitance is not
greatly smaller in the neon sign transformers than in the isolation
transformers - insulation breakdown even with the low current flowing
through interwinding capacitance will cause a problem sooner or later, so
in an isolation transformer scheme you need to connect one end of each
neon sign transformer to its case. You will need two isolation
transformers that withstand reliably half the secondary voltage, or one
that reliably withstands the full secondary voltage.

I think this gets Rube-Goldbergish and is asking for big trouble.

Two neon sign transformers in parallel will give you an arc of same
starting length, but that will stretch longer before it breaks. However,
if you get zapped you are more likely to die.

- Don Klipstein ([email protected])
 
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