Hi Martin,
I know my suggestion is more costly, but I found that many tubes able to handle that kind of current also work at much higher voltages than the 400 V limit of the 3+. I have also procured the V6 from Ronald (as a matter of fact I was one of his beta testers on that model), and I find it great for the large tubes.
One of the things we discovered along the way is that the V6 is somehow more prone to spurious oscillations, but in most cases I found them fairly easily suppressed. 1000V at 1A is bloody impressive!
Just a thought, Bill v
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Hi Martin,
The two resistors paralleled would be about 0.964 Ohm, in order to produce 5V across it would require a current of more than 5 Amp, I expect to see smoke long before that (if it even could go that high). To limit the current through the resistor at 0.6 Amp, you would need a 0,58 V zener. I don’t think they make one. Also, a zener would not protect the circuit. If the current got high enough to cause the zener to break down it would protect the resistor, the current through the rest of the circuit would increase even more as a result of the zener breakdown.
Bill v
From: utr...@googlegroups.com [mailto:utr...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Martin Manning
Sent: Sunday, January 30, 2022 9:54 AM
To: uTracer <utr...@googlegroups.com>
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Hi Martin,
Very interesting. Have you done any calculations on the tank capacitors? That much current, even for a ms discharges the tank capacitors. Would adding capacity to the tank be needed at some point? How would that affect the tank charging circuits?

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I did a similar test but with 2.2kOhm resistor (only have those) and using uTracerJS, because it was easier to visualise and also I am attaching the actual .utd files here, so everyone can import them in uTracerJS and then visualise and compare. '2x-2.2k' is a plot for 2 resistors at the same time, and then '1x-2.2k-a VS 2x-2.2k' compares acquisition of 1 resistor on anode VS only anode measurements of two resistors and then '2x-2.2k VS 1x-22k-s' compares acquisition of one resistor on Screen connector VS screen measurements of two resistors simultaneously.




