Ho-made non-inductive resitor WAS: Folded Dipole Antenna
On Dec 9, 1:51*pm, Jim wrote:
On 12/9/2010 7:56 AM, JIMMIE wrote:
On Dec 9, 12:42 am, "Sal M. *wrote:
On Dec 8, 12:25 pm, Jim *wrote:
On Sun, 5 Dec 2010 21:28:56 +0000 (UTC), No
wrote:
Another idea I just had is perhaps having someone with a ceramics oven
paint on the endcaps with ceramic glaze. It would look like a giant
ceramic resistor! *But then again, I would guess that as the resistor
heated up, it would crack. * Never mind...
I'd guess the high heat used to fire ceramics would simply cause the
carbon to burn up.
In the Navy, the shipyards all have a device called a Load Bank. *It's
a
large metal tank on an insulated vehicle. The tank is filled up with
salt water and electrodes lowered into it to test the output of the
ship's
generators. *Any chance that it has ham applications? *I intend to try
it
first with an antenna analyzer and then, if it looks promising, my rig..
Yes they did the same with transmitters, often all you need was a
metal mop bucket and a piece of copper pipe
Jimmie
A water load bank is good for hundreds of KW at 60hz.
For use with a pair of 6146's we used to wire a lamp to a coax
connector. We had a load as well as visual indication of the relative
power output.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I built a wattmeter of sorts around a circuit like that. After tuning
up the transmitter to light bulb dummy load I would measure the
resistnace of a photo resistor exposed to the light then see how much
60Hz AC voltage and current took to light the lamps to the same
brillance.
Jimmie
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