Hello all. First post here. I've been messing with TC on an IPV5 using NiFe70. I have been trying to make a dual coil, 15 wrap, 26 gauge build work in TC mode for weeks now. One of those things I come back to every now and then. Needless to say, I've been having trouble with it. The problem has been either anemic results, or dry hits and singed cotton. I've looked in to dual coil tc builds, and came across quite a bit of debate on why it would or would not work. Most of it centered around the idea that adding coils does not change the tcr of the build. After today, I disagree.
Steam engine has the tcr of NiFe 70 at .005250 so this was the tcr setting I've been using, and failing at. After some long pondering, I realized that my failure was stemming from the way the board operates. The board doesn't know you are using more than one coil, therefore it does not compensate for parallel resistance. VERY hypothetical example below:
Single .1ohm coil set at 450f increases resistance by .1 to achieve the desired 450 degrees. Ending resistance at .2. All is happy and well.
Dual .2 ohm coils, reads .1. Set at 450, both coils increase resistance by .1 to achieve desired temperature. In a parallel circuit, resistance is raised by .05, and this is what the mod sees. The mod thinks it needs to push moar power, and things go amiss.
I found I had to lower the set tcr on my ipv5 from 5250 to 4500, effectively telling the mod to expect less of a resistance change. Working perfectly now.
Am I off on my thoughts? Or am I just late in figuring out something that was solved eons ago?
Steam engine has the tcr of NiFe 70 at .005250 so this was the tcr setting I've been using, and failing at. After some long pondering, I realized that my failure was stemming from the way the board operates. The board doesn't know you are using more than one coil, therefore it does not compensate for parallel resistance. VERY hypothetical example below:
Single .1ohm coil set at 450f increases resistance by .1 to achieve the desired 450 degrees. Ending resistance at .2. All is happy and well.
Dual .2 ohm coils, reads .1. Set at 450, both coils increase resistance by .1 to achieve desired temperature. In a parallel circuit, resistance is raised by .05, and this is what the mod sees. The mod thinks it needs to push moar power, and things go amiss.
I found I had to lower the set tcr on my ipv5 from 5250 to 4500, effectively telling the mod to expect less of a resistance change. Working perfectly now.
Am I off on my thoughts? Or am I just late in figuring out something that was solved eons ago?