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Cecil Moore wrote:
Ian White GM3SEK wrote: It's a persistent ham myth that an RF choke has specially good properties when the total length of wire is a quarter-wavelength, and specially bad properties at twice that frequency. When the wire is wound into any kind of coil, neither of those claims is true (except maybe by some rare coincidence). Please don't imply that I said anything about the total length of wire - I didn't. In that case, I suggest you stop making constant references to "1/4WL self-resonance" and "1/2WL self-resonance". If you don't mean it literally, it's a very misleading metaphor. What you say is true and I never said otherwise. Well-designed coils can be modeled as rough approximations to transmission lines. The choke acts essentially as a parallel-tuned circuit, with its inductance tuned by its own self-capacitance. There will be a series resonance at some higher frequency, but not at twice the parallel- resonant frequency (except, again, perhaps by a rare coincidence). I didn't say exactly twice the frequency and I said it was an approximation. The chokes at: http://www.k1ttt.net/technote/airbalun.html average close to double the frequency. We're actually looking at exactly the same data (except that the original reference quoted on K1TTT's site also includes a ferrite bead choke for comparison). I have graphed the |Z| data for all the chokes (see link to spreadsheet below) and there is no consistent trend. In the following table, Fmax is the frequency of maximum impedance, and Fmin is the frequency of any minimum observable within the frequency range (the 8t 1 layer choke has two very small minima). Ratio is Fmax/Fmin. Choke Fmax Fmin Ratio 6t 1 layer 24 none - 12t 1 layer 15 31 2.1 4t 1 layer 21 34 1.6 8t 1 layer 12 19 1.6 12 32 2.7 8t bunched 6 36 6.0 Judging from the shapes of the graphs and the table above, I would say that "twice the frequency" is not even valid as an approximation. No one would expect a bunched coil to be very well behaved. Everything I have said applies to a coax choke wound on some kind of coil form with some care given to its design. Across the whole 1-30MHz band, the bunched choke behaves as an almost perfect L-C circuit, free from any unwanted resonances. The only problem with that design is to reproduce the exact parallel-resonant frequency from one example to the next. There is NO series resonance at twice the parallel-resonant frequency - that would be about 12MHz, and nothing at all "special" is happening there. At 18MHz, where the total winding length is 0.25 wavelengths, there is a very small wobble in the data, but nothing more. The series resonance, where the phase angle flips from negative to positive again, is at 31.5MHz, which is totally unrelated to any of the other frequencies above. The winding length is 0.5 wavelengths at 35MHz (where the data runs out) but again nothing "special" is happening there. Again, no one would expect a bunched coil to be well behaved. Thus there is no evidence whatever for the myth of the "resonant length of wire in a choke". You keep saying that as if I said otherwise. I didn't. The length of the wire is irrelevant to this discussion. Turning now to the solenoid-wound choke, the different method of winding has increased the parallel resonance of the same length of cable from 6MHz to 9MHz. This is consistent with simple L-C behaviour, and with the solenoid having less distributed capacitance than the bunched winding. Once again, this choke behaves almost entirely as a parallel-tuned circuit. There are slightly larger wobbles in the data at the frequencies where the total winding lengths are a quarter-wave and a half-wave, but these "transmission-line" effects are still very minor, and completely dominated by the simple L-C behaviour. The point is that there is a 1/4WL high impedance resonance and a 1/2WL low impedance resonance that are roughly where they should be. The 1/2WL low impedance resonance should be avoided. As shown above, "1/2wl self resonance" ceases to be a valid concept once a length of wire is wound into a coil... The 1/2WL self-resonance has little to do with the length of wire. It is where the phase angle flips at a point of low impedance. The 1/4WL self-resonance is where the phase angle flips at a point of high impedance. The length of wire is irrelevant, a moot point. I don't know why you brought it up in the first place. If you say "the length of wire is irrelevant to this discussion" - with which I most strongly agree - why do you persist in using these terms "1/4WL" and "1/2WL" - what dimension of the choke are they referring to? The Excel workbook at www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek/misc/chokes.xls contains three spreadsheets. 1. Original data For all the coiled chokes (same data in the ARRL Antenna Book and on K1TT's site) with graphs of |Z|. There are minor dips at higher frequencies, but they are *minor*, and always in a region where the impedance is so low that you wouldn't be using that choke anyway. These graphs simply don't support the assertion of a series resonance at "twice the parallel-resonant frequency" - not even as an approximation. 2. Three chokes compared The solenoid-wound 8-turn choke, the bunched 8-turn choke, and the ferrite choke for comparison. The graphs give details of the Z magnitude and phase. 3. LC model For the 8-turn solenoid choke. The inductance is calculated from the physical dimensions of the choke, using the standard ARRL formula (winding length assumes close-wound RG213). The self-capacitance is calculated from the inductance and the choke's parallel-resonant frequency. The dynamic resistance is the peak value from 12MHz, and is assumed constant at all frequencies. Those simple assumptions - a fixed L, C and R, all connected in parallel - give a very good fit to the measured data at all frequencies (only one point has been forced to fit, namely the peak at 12MHz). This shows that the dominant behaviour of the choke is like a simple LC circuit, damped by some loss resistance. Much of the loss resistance is probably due to losses in the PVC jacket of the RG213. If these losses are actually increasing with frequency (rather than being constant, as assumed) then the fit at all frequencies would be improved. This very simple LCR model predicts almost everything that was measured. However, it cannot predict any series resonance at some higher frequency. If Cecil cares to produce a transmission-line model of the same choke that can do better, I'm sure we'd all be interested to see it. -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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