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If fans are blowing all around, then the heat transferred by convection from air is minimal. You have no conduction as they don't touch, so that leaves radiation. You can insulate the copper tubes with that slip-on fiberglass sleeves, OR paint the copper tube with aluminum paint so its reflective of the radiant heat.At least then the heat rising from the caps isn't heating your copper and coolant
Despite Gina just standing there and watching me blub, blub, blub …… I did finally make it out of the deep end. I've started a little investigation on the difference between the 50A and 20A models of the ZVS. I first mentioned the 50A models seemed to have 8 caps, and the 20A's have 6. I looked at Ebay listings on each model until I found pictures where I could read the values on the capacitors (see attached examples).Doesn't matter how many caps are on it, just total capacitance
Doesn't matter how many caps are on it, just total capacitance, then need to know coil inductance. It can be calculated, however since capacitors have a wide tolerance (-/+ 5% and often more) measurement is the last word.
The lower the frequency the deeper the penetration into the workpiece, for thru heating of large pieces of steel they use low frequencies and gobs of power. 100KHz is about ideal for brass, around .010" penetration.
Ya got me, I should have said QUICK DEPLOY@BillK55 Auto-inflate shouldn't need a pull cord.![]()
I've never done it myself, but I remember someone explaining to me how they did it, and it makes me wonder if maybe in certain situations different techniques work better. Rather than squirt the solvent out on one piece then stick the two parts together, try holding the two pieces in place, then apply the solvent at the interface between the two parts. It was my understanding that the solvent would wick into the gap, one of those surface tension tricks, and just a little drop would go along way. You may end up with a little cosmetic blemish at the application point. I, don't know if a quick wipe would take care of it, or you may just be stuck with that little blemish. Could also be its a scale up thing, I don't know how far the solvent can wick, so for a larger piece using this technique you might have to make several application points around the perimeter. The wicking distance is going to be in part a function of how smooth the interface is between the two parts. The person I was talking to was actually bonding clear acrylic parts, so the two surfaces were highly polished, but it was amazing that after it was done the interface practically disappeared.Then came the moment of truth. Poof! Sprayed the solvent straight across the disc.
Oh and another tidbit noticed along the way. Both the 20A and 50A ZVS's (at least all checked so far) have 50 kHz rated capacitors, so the fact in our application that the capacitors and board underneath them overheat and are the locus of common board failures is probably expected. We're running them at 200% of spec.
I've not seen a "frequency rating" for a capacitor before.