Skogsgurra
Electrical
- Mar 31, 2003
- 11,815
Another day - another problem.
A guys phoned me the other week and asked me questions about an electric fence. I had helped another guy with interference from fences many years ago and this was why he phoned me. What I did was to reduce du/dt by putting a series inductor in the output from the fence "lectric" as they called it. That "lectric" was a capacitor discharge device that output 10 - 15 kV pulses with an energy contents around 30 joules. A series inductor helped reduce interference on fax and modem and the clicks that could be heard in the phone were also gone.
The energy delivered to the fence increased when the inductor was introduced. I was a little surprised at first, but when I studied the signals, I realized that the "lectric" was feeding a mostly capacitive load before and that created a high output current pulse with consequent high internal losses in the device. With the series reactor, the rising edge was about 10 us and with it was around 40 us long. So the peak current was less and the peak output voltage went from around 3 kV to slightly above 5 kV. So, all were happy and the series inductor is still there, for all I know.
Now, the problems were a little bit different. Not much, but still.
The fence were built without insulators. Using thin, flat wooden poles that were said to be suitable for electric fences. I had never seen that before and I am curious to know if those old ribs actually work in electric fence applications. There must be several hundreds of them and the environment is meadow and swamp in a mostly rainy Swedish summer. Picture shows one of the poles.
Gunnar Englund
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Half full - Half empty? I don't mind. It's what in it that counts.
A guys phoned me the other week and asked me questions about an electric fence. I had helped another guy with interference from fences many years ago and this was why he phoned me. What I did was to reduce du/dt by putting a series inductor in the output from the fence "lectric" as they called it. That "lectric" was a capacitor discharge device that output 10 - 15 kV pulses with an energy contents around 30 joules. A series inductor helped reduce interference on fax and modem and the clicks that could be heard in the phone were also gone.
The energy delivered to the fence increased when the inductor was introduced. I was a little surprised at first, but when I studied the signals, I realized that the "lectric" was feeding a mostly capacitive load before and that created a high output current pulse with consequent high internal losses in the device. With the series reactor, the rising edge was about 10 us and with it was around 40 us long. So the peak current was less and the peak output voltage went from around 3 kV to slightly above 5 kV. So, all were happy and the series inductor is still there, for all I know.
Now, the problems were a little bit different. Not much, but still.
The fence were built without insulators. Using thin, flat wooden poles that were said to be suitable for electric fences. I had never seen that before and I am curious to know if those old ribs actually work in electric fence applications. There must be several hundreds of them and the environment is meadow and swamp in a mostly rainy Swedish summer. Picture shows one of the poles.
Gunnar Englund
--------------------------------------
Half full - Half empty? I don't mind. It's what in it that counts.