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Old November 3rd 03, 06:49 PM
Tom Bruhns
 
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(Tom Bruhns) wrote in message om...
"Reg Edwards" wrote in message ...
The velocity factor of ALL solid polyethylene coax cable, regardless of
impedance, is 0.665


Even if you just ignore the fact that at low frequencies, R dominates
over omega*L and affects the velocity factor, even if you just say
VF=c/sqrt(LC), I believe there are changes with frequency. That's
because with a good dielectric like polyethylene, C doesn't change
much with frequency (AFAIK), but L decreases as the skin depth
decreases. On large line, it's unlikely to be noticable, but on a
line with an inner conductor radius only a few skin depths at the low
end of HF, the change can be perceptable. Of course, the R term does
dominate over omega*L at low frequencies. If the velocity factor were
independent of frequency, I'd expect no dispersion.

BTW, I'd be a little surprised to find an inexpensive line which did
not have polyethylene dielectric...polyethylene isn't expensive, and
it's a good dielectric except for its low softening/melting
temperature. You should be able to get a pretty good idea what it is
from carefully measured VF, if it's a solid dielectric. There are
very few inexpensive and low-loss plastics with as low a relative
dielectric constant as polyethylene.

Cheers,
Tom