View Single Post
  #23   Report Post  
Old August 27th 10, 08:31 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,sci.electronics.design
Tim Williams Tim Williams is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 27
Default Heating in 4-1/2 turn inductor

"Jeff Johnson" wrote in message
...
big ****in snip
The reason is that the current through the wire will almost be surely
the same through out all points along the wire.


Well, no:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proximi...romagnetism%29

the current density varies strongly, especially if the wire is thick
(curiously, it was never stated what size wire is in question, nor what
type; 600kHz suggests fine stranded litz!).

Wire near the gap (which is usually placed in the center, right underneath
the winding) experiences fringing fields, which dramatically increases
losses.

That precisely means that the heat generated per unit length will be the
same.


Eddy currents in the center of the coil are much stronger than at the
ends, so the center of a solenoid heats up much more strongly.

The uncooled coil in this video demonstrates proximity effect:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nY66rBJvbpY
See the connections are clean and coppery, but the coil has seen better
days. You can't really tell if the center turns are hotter; they probably
are by a little bit.


Of course Kirchoff is harder to fool, obviously the total current flowing
along the wire is the current flowing along the wire period. Unless
there's a short, which supposedly was inspected as to have none.


None of these are an "end" effect. The only possible explanation is a
short, or else, "look harder". It's plainly obvious that the cause is NOT
"an additional half turn". It is only a coincidence that this symptom
showed up between turns 4 and 5.

Tim

--
Deep Friar: a very philosophical monk.
Website: http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms