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On Sat, 12 Aug 2006 23:32:09 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote:
Walter Maxwell wrote: IMO, Cecil, you've been hoaxed if you thought a coil self-resonant at 6.6 MHz was a high-Q coil at 4 MHz. All I know is that Texas Bugcatcher coils tend to be near the top of the the 75m mobile shootout results. Using base loading on a GMC pickup, it is resonant on 3.8 MHz with a six foot stinger. Remove the stinger and it is self-resonant at 6.6 MHz. My 75m Texas Bugcatcher coil was a gift from K7JEB. It is 26.5 turns at 4 tpi on a 6" air core form. Calculates out to be about 70 uH. I don't know how to make it higher Q. I'm guessing #12 wire in the coil, which leaves lots of spacing between turns , which should make the distributed capacitance very small. I haven't made any calculations, but a seat of the pants estimate would say the self-resonant frequency would be much, much higher than 6.6 MHz. (As I remember, the Hustler used #14 close spaced on about 2" diameter to obtain a self-resonant frequency at 6MHz.) Cecil, I suggest you re-measure the self-resonant frequency of the coil by itself, and if you have the means to do it, also measure the series resistance at both the self-resonant frequency and at 4.0 MHz. I'm betting there will be a large difference in the resistances, and that the self-resonant frequency will be much greater than 6.6 MHz. Walt |
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