Jeremy Harris
100 MW
Thanks very much for that, Rick, I could have done with that good advice months ago when I had my own fair share of copper drilling problems...............
Jeremy
Jeremy
Fritz said:Hi Guys, I just finished my microprocessor controlled 600Ws Capacitor spot welder with Pulse Width control...check it out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yabesdeGKJo
Nemo, you are blowing your mosfets because these capacitor welders can pull up to 10 000 amps at 20v for a Millisecond or less. Amps=volts/resistance
Nickel's resistance is +- 0.003 Ohm so 20V/0.003 = 6 666 amps and it is higher when you weld copper with a very low resistance. The size of the capacitor is the time it takes to fully discharge. 1Farad cap= +-15Ms and a 3Farad cap = +-45Ms when you weld 0.003ohm nickel.
People ask why don't their 200Amp SCR's blow then......the answer is that it will blow after a lot of high voltage welds because If you look at your SCR's Data sheet you'll see I(TSM) Max. (A)=5.0k. It means the surge current is 5000Amps. If you weld nickel you can go to about 16Volt.....16/0.003 = 5 333amps and you should be okay. 2 SCR's in parallel will handle 10 000 amps and that should be safe.
I was actually on my way to bed....
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pwbset said:I think the problem is that I have a wide enough tab material that it covers the positive side completely so I can't do 1 on/1 off so can't get in deep enough... I have to do 2 probes on the tab material on the + side and that just isn't cutting it. On the negative side I can do 1 on/1 off and it sparks/welds pretty well. Since I'm going to be pumping 2kw+ through this pack though I need the extra wide tabbing... so...
oatnet said:Great thread!
I got these two massive 100v 82000 μF caps (above) at the swap meet today for $10 each. I''m feeling kinda stupid because I was so excited that they were 100v, I misread the μF and thought they said 820000 μF, so instead of 1.6 F I have 0.164 F. I'll try to find the same guy next month and buy the rest of what he has and parallel them into something higher.
I saw RLT's "Higher V weld" page on LED hacks, so I am thinking that if I use a higher V I could actually do something with the piddly 164,000 μF I have now. RLT you said over 25v you were meling the electrodes, at <25v to you think I could make some decent welds with what I have right now? Of should I just get some of the 'professional' electrodes you mentioned and try it at higher volts?
oatnet said:The only SCDs I found at the swap meet were these little 35a ones sitting on the caps - they were a buck each so I bought them anyhow, I'd reckon they would fry if I tried to use them on this so I need to pick up something better, I have to go re-read this thread for detail.
that should work fine but I'd do two or three layers LOLoatnet said:-JD
PS would this copper strap help folks in paralleling caps? Instead of hammering tubing, I've bought 1/2" and 1" strap from metalelectric and used it on EVs and Ebikes:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=220361898185
MitchJi said:Could you fold the tab into an L shape (narrower), weld it, and then flatten the L?
pwbset said:Ahh what a difference a volt makes! I've got some DC wall warts laying about and thought.. hmm.. turns out one of the "9v 300mA" puts out 14.45v so I hooked it up to my capacitor and 'lo and behold I'm actually getting some penetration on the konion positive end now!! Where 13.2v didn't cut it at all 14.45v is close! These 4 welds pulled off somewhat easily... with pliers... progress! I have no doubt that once my 16v power supply arrives I'll be in business. Total investment for this CD welder around $140... not too shabby!
MitchJi said:Great news8)
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Yes the stored energy formula in a cap is E= (C*V^2)/2 so yes a volt means quite a jump :wink: cause of the squared thingy.pwbset said:Ahh what a difference a volt makes! I've got some DC wall warts laying about and thought.. hmm.. turns out one of the "9v 300mA" puts out 14.45v so I hooked it up to my capacitor and 'lo and behold I'm actually getting some penetration on the konion positive end now!! Where 13.2v didn't cut it at all 14.45v is close! These 4 welds pulled off somewhat easily... with pliers... progress! I have no doubt that once my 16v power supply arrives I'll be in business. Total investment for this CD welder around $140... not too shabby!
pwbset said:just found an old Linksys router wall wart at work that is putting out 16.8v @ 1A! That should provide the perfect konion + weld about every 8-9 seconds. Worth noting for konion fans that the Makita V cells have 2 little welds/cell while the Makita VTs have 4 and the VTs in the Bosch fatpacks have far superior/thicker welds than any of the Makita stuff, which is probably why a single fatpack can dump 1,200 watts sustained 'til LVC with no issues at all.![]()
pwbset said:Thanks for all the great info terramir! I'm using the exact same "1.5f" Volfenhag cap that the how-to uses, which they said 16v continuous and 20v surge and it looks like he used it at 18v without issue (though he didn't go into it). I'm hoping 16.8v is within a tolerable overage range and honestly my Radio Crap multi-meter reads high anyway I'm finding so we'll see what my good multi-meter at home says tonight. I'll post photos of the carnage if it vents etc.The konions + side is really thick and is detached off the top of the cell can anyway so I don't think it'll punch through. Good to know about the 2 vs 4 weld thing.. maybe after practice I'll get it dialed in and need less welds. I think I need to "sharpen" my electrode pencils a bit more also... they are pretty blunt. Anyway.. thanks again! Love trying to digest the technicals you throw out there...
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