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#16
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Re: Victor running underwater!
Technically, DI water has ions in it. There is a class of purity above that water called reagent grade or nanopure water in which you measure purity in resistance.
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#17
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Re: Victor running underwater!
De-ionized water (sometimes referred to as "distilled" by users) is used for cooling water in some high power transmitters. Water flows over high voltage and low voltage parts and current probes are used to determine the conductivity of the water. High voltage power supply trips at a few milliamps are common with poorly maintained equipment. In some cases, designers actually use china pipes to keep the water insulated from sensitive (read 'human') objects just in case some contamination enters the system and causes conduction to skyrocket. The UHF transmitter I worked on in Peoria many years ago had 25,000 volts across the output tubes and the cooling water. As I remember it had both a ceramic filter and a de-ionizer in the circulating water. The collector (plate/anode) was vapor cooled. This means that cold water is just poured onto the structure and cools while turning to steam vapor. The steam is carried off to a heat exchanger where it is turned back into water. Regular maintenance includes scheduled water changes.
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#18
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Re: Victor running underwater!
I was lucky Al, I got to work on installing satellite ground stations after the cryogenic cooled receivers and water cooled transmitters had run their course....
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#19
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Re: Victor running underwater!
The Victor is sealed in Max GFE A/B epoxy from Polymer Composites, Inc. It has a thermal conductivity of 0.682 W/mK, which is about the same as a thermal grease like Wakefield 120 (0.735 W/mK).
Here's the closest thing I can find to an online datasheet for this product: http://cgi.cafr.ebay.ca/EPOXY-RESIN-...7 C240%3A1318 It also provides information on their recommended mixing and casting procedures. |
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#20
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Re: Victor running underwater!
Quote:
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#21
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Re: Victor running underwater!
Quote:
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#22
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Re: Victor running underwater!
That's hard to do in a thread where Al says something
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#23
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Re: Victor running underwater!
*sigh* I thought I sounded intelligent...*sigh*
A few years back when they made me a manager and the radar guys said they needed some deionized water for the transmitter tube, I had never heard of the stuff. They said to make sure it was reagent grade. Boy did I have a hard time finding that stuff! Now I know why. |
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#24
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Re: Victor running underwater!
You are!!!! People like you are my heros.
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#25
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Re: Victor running underwater!
Quote:
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#26
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Re: Victor running underwater!
I think it would be to your advantage to reduce the amount of potting material you use, for both cost and thermal reasons. Perhaps place a few inserts in your mold?
As a point of reference, Aluminum is about 250 W/mK and stationary water is about 0.58W/mK. |
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#27
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Re: Victor running underwater!
It's been a few years since I opened up a victor, but I recall that they have an optical isolation on the PWM input from the controller.
Is it safe to assume that thats accomplished with a 'closed' unit, and there are no concerns about getting something opaque in there? |
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#28
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Re: Victor running underwater!
Andy,
Yes, that is a sealed opto-isolator, one of the 4N series as I remember. |
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#29
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Re: Victor running underwater!
Quote:
If you do break a victor open and take a look, it is the tall-ish 4 or 6 pin* device near the connector. * (I can't remember: Only 4 pins are used, but often these devices are in a 6-er to match the 5-pin devices in the family.) |
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#30
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Re: Victor running underwater!
If you want to go with high current, you will need some sort of heatsink. Probably the easiest is to solder some copper tubes coming off the metal transistor tabs on the Victor that poke out of the compound. Why use a 40A speed controller if you're never going to pull it? I think this is eluding to a new possible design from these guys
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