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Let's say I have a coax cable with 83% velocity factor. I want to use
its inner conductor (that is solid copper single conductor) so I remove the outer sheath and the braid. I am left with the inner conductor and what was the dielectric, now performing as an insulator around my wire. What is the resulting velocity factor? * 83%, as the original cable * 100%, copper's * something else? As others have already mentioned, you have a bit of wire with a plastic environmental sheath. You didn't mention the frequency, but for HF I have each close to trees. The calculated length is about 4% longer than the the actual length requred for resonance, even with more than 3 metres of nylon cord to support the ends. In other words, the velocity factor of a bit of wire in space is 1. Put it near something and that VF falls a bit. Stuff it in a metal tube and it will fall a LOT, maybe even approaching half (0.66). |
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