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Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
I am not your offshore lab service, Cecil. If you want to back up your speculations, do your own work. I posted my measurements but I am handicapped by not being able to measure any impedance above 650 ohms. But I can sure see those series resonant points with my MFJ-259B. You know, the points that your lumped circuit model says do not exist? I know what a parallel LC circuit does. The point you continue to evade is that, from VLF up to about 20MHz, this coil of cable behaves in exactly the same way. And falls apart above 20 MHz because of transmission line effects. Your lumped circuit model is a subset of the distributed network model. Of course, they will give similar results up to the point where the lumped circuit model falls apart. The circuit looks inductive below the resonant frequency and capacitive above it, and passing through resonance the phase angle of the impedance flips from +90deg to -90deg... and then it stays very close to 90deg, clear up to about 20MHz. Yes, both models give similar results up to 20 MHz which is about half way around the Smith Chart. Then your model falls apart. The fact that the phase angle departs radically from -90 degrees in reality when your model predicts that it should stay at -90 degrees is prima facie evidence that your model has fallen apart. Your own phase graphs contradict what you are saying. That is the usual mixture of selective quoting and false logic. What you continue to overlook is that the behaviour all the way from DC through the 4.7MHz resonance and onward up to about 20MHz can be accurately represented by nothing more elaborate than a simple LCR circuit. The fall in impedance from the resonant frequency up to about 20MHz is completely accounted for by just those three simple parameters: two reactances and one fixed loss resistance in parallel. Just proving that the lumped circuit model is a subset of the distributed network model and the two results are expected to be similar. But your model falls apart above 20 MHz where the transmission line effects are obvious. Above that frequency there are effects that the simple LCR model cannot account for. I have always said so, and yes, a transmission-line model could account for those. I certainly don't remember you ever saying that but we are making progress. You are agreeing with me and we seem to have little argument left. What I seem to remember you saying is that it is "ridiculous" to model a parallel self-resonant choke as a transmission line. But my memory is not as good as it once was. That is simply not true. The limitation in working range is simply the shunting effect of the self-capacitance, which becomes increasingly important above resonance and causes a long progressive fall in impedance. This effect is very simple and entirely predictable. By 20MHz it has reduced the impedance to a hundred ohms or less, which means that the coil of cable is no use as a feedline choke for that frequency. Your rose colored glasses are giving you false images. In the earlier example, the 12 turn choke had a maximum choking impedance at 15 MHz. At 23 MHz, the phase angle goes to -88 degrees just as both models predict. At 32 MHz, the phase angle is back to +20.4 degrees. Using your lumped circuit model, how does the phase angel get back to +20.4 degrees with that lumped capacitance dominating??? Ian, IF YOU ANSWER ONLY ONE QUESTION, PLEASE ANSWER THIS ONE. Exactly how does the phase angle get to +20.4 degrees at the exact time that your lumped circuit model is predicting -90 degrees??? (That's a 541% error!) The series resonances above 20MHz cause further dips in impedance to only a few ohms, but those dips are quite localized in frequency. They are not the cause of the long progressive fall in impedance above the parallel resonance, which is what limits the usable bandwidth of the choke. You are attempting to use petitio principii to prove the validity of your model and I think you know that is a no-no. A similar long progressive fall happens with the distributed network model but it accurately predicts the transmission line effects proved by the bumps in the phase graphs that you provided. Back to the previously discussed 12 turn choke. The impedance at 23 MHz is 955 ohms at -88 degrees, almost purely capacitive. Your "long progression" model would predict 686 ohms at -89 degrees for 32 MHz. Yet at 32 MHz, the impedance is measured to be 258 ohms at +20.4 degrees. Your lumped circuit "long progressive fall" model could not be any more wrong. Your impedance is off by 166% and your phase is off by 541%. Please note that if your lumped circuit model were correct, the choke would still be performing pretty well at 32 MHz with a choking impedance of 686 ohms. Your above statement is thus proved false by the measured data. The challenge is still on the table, Cecil, for YOU to develop a quantified transmission-line model that will predict all the measured properties of a resonant choke over that wider range of frequencies. My model, although not perfect, yields more accurate results than your model over that wider range of frequencies. My model predicts the bumps in the phase graphs. Your model predicts zero bumps in the phase graphs. Yet the bumps are obvious on your phase graphs. My model, a superset of yours, sure doesn't produce errors like 541%. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
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