I built my first SSG Monopole. I'm very excited that it works! (Though not perfectly, so I'll need some help troubleshooting.)
Here's a video followed by a description of what you're looking at.
The circuit is shown in the video. I built this after reading the SSG Beginner Guide.
Parts details:
- The power supply is a 12V 1amp trickle charger.
- The transistor is a 2N3055
- The coil is bifilar - 100ft of #24 and #20.
- The neon buib is 110V from Radio Shack. (I don't know if it's Ne-2)
- Grain-of-wheat lamp is the smallest at Radio Shack.
- The core is filled with 1/8" plain welding rod from Home Depot. Seems to work fine.
- Diodes are standard 1N4001 and 1N4007.
- The rotor is made from a random plastic plate cover thing with a hole in it from a thrift store.
- The spindle/bearings are from a hard drive - it happened to fit right inside the plate cover, though it's wobbly.
- Magnets are standard 1-7/8" x 7/8" x 3/4" mounted inside the rotor -- no flying magnets to worry about.
- Coil to magnet separation is about 1/4"
- Resistance on this run was about 400ohms.
- RPM is about 330 in this video. I've gotten it up to 440 RPM.
- I believe it's running in attraction mode here. I paid no attention to N vs. S polarity, simply switching the circuit polarity until it worked.
It runs well and charges the 3ah battery at a decent rate, but it has problems:
-- Biggest problem: The neon always stays on.
-- The grain-of-wheat lamp doesn't light up, unless I drop the base resistance all the way down.)
It'd be great if someone could help troubleshoot it. Here are some things I've noticed.
- The neon lamp brightens correctly when I disconnect the charging wires.
- The neon is always on. (ie. flashing very fast)
- When I drop the base resistance, the neon becomes less continuously lit, ie. it flickers more.
- The voltage measured at the power supply is 16-17V. (Not the 12.8V the power supply puts out.)
This system is no longer functional. After getting about a day's use out of it, a small wire adjustment triggered a meltdown. First the neon turned off. The transistor overheated (and gave me a good blister). Then the output diode literally melted.
Given that the neon responds to the charging circuit, my first thought is that I may have had a leaky output diode. (It measured the correct resistance, as far as I knew, but I wouldn't have caught a leak). Maybe this could explain the high input voltage. (Or is it supposed to be that way? - I don't know.)
I need to get more parts before I can continue, but I'm not sure I can afford it right now. Maybe someone can advise before I do so.
In any case, I'm excited! Down the rabbit hole!
Rik
Here's a video followed by a description of what you're looking at.
The circuit is shown in the video. I built this after reading the SSG Beginner Guide.
Parts details:
- The power supply is a 12V 1amp trickle charger.
- The transistor is a 2N3055
- The coil is bifilar - 100ft of #24 and #20.
- The neon buib is 110V from Radio Shack. (I don't know if it's Ne-2)
- Grain-of-wheat lamp is the smallest at Radio Shack.
- The core is filled with 1/8" plain welding rod from Home Depot. Seems to work fine.
- Diodes are standard 1N4001 and 1N4007.
- The rotor is made from a random plastic plate cover thing with a hole in it from a thrift store.
- The spindle/bearings are from a hard drive - it happened to fit right inside the plate cover, though it's wobbly.
- Magnets are standard 1-7/8" x 7/8" x 3/4" mounted inside the rotor -- no flying magnets to worry about.
- Coil to magnet separation is about 1/4"
- Resistance on this run was about 400ohms.
- RPM is about 330 in this video. I've gotten it up to 440 RPM.
- I believe it's running in attraction mode here. I paid no attention to N vs. S polarity, simply switching the circuit polarity until it worked.
It runs well and charges the 3ah battery at a decent rate, but it has problems:
-- Biggest problem: The neon always stays on.
-- The grain-of-wheat lamp doesn't light up, unless I drop the base resistance all the way down.)
It'd be great if someone could help troubleshoot it. Here are some things I've noticed.
- The neon lamp brightens correctly when I disconnect the charging wires.
- The neon is always on. (ie. flashing very fast)
- When I drop the base resistance, the neon becomes less continuously lit, ie. it flickers more.
- The voltage measured at the power supply is 16-17V. (Not the 12.8V the power supply puts out.)
This system is no longer functional. After getting about a day's use out of it, a small wire adjustment triggered a meltdown. First the neon turned off. The transistor overheated (and gave me a good blister). Then the output diode literally melted.
Given that the neon responds to the charging circuit, my first thought is that I may have had a leaky output diode. (It measured the correct resistance, as far as I knew, but I wouldn't have caught a leak). Maybe this could explain the high input voltage. (Or is it supposed to be that way? - I don't know.)
I need to get more parts before I can continue, but I'm not sure I can afford it right now. Maybe someone can advise before I do so.
In any case, I'm excited! Down the rabbit hole!
Rik
Comment