Michael77
Mechanical
- Jul 23, 2011
- 2
I have been researching induction heating as of late and last week I found a site that showed a metal tube with two AC leads going to it (one at each end). The voltage was stepped down to something reasonable so that someone touching it when there is the hopefully unlikely grounding/neutral issue would not be fatal.
I tried to find the site again but couldn't. Then I found hundreds of sites showing an induction heater as a coil around a conductive object, which makes a whole lot more sense to me in terms of the word "induction" being used.
Perhaps the simple tube heater (intended to heat whatever is inside the tube) was actually a resistive heater, with the tube being the resistance? I just can't see how the resistance of a piece of pipe could ever be high enough to not cause an over draw dituation.
Thanks for any knowledge shed on this topic.
I tried to find the site again but couldn't. Then I found hundreds of sites showing an induction heater as a coil around a conductive object, which makes a whole lot more sense to me in terms of the word "induction" being used.
Perhaps the simple tube heater (intended to heat whatever is inside the tube) was actually a resistive heater, with the tube being the resistance? I just can't see how the resistance of a piece of pipe could ever be high enough to not cause an over draw dituation.
Thanks for any knowledge shed on this topic.