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On Sun, 29 Apr 2007 06:52:17 -0500, "amdx" wrote:
I agree with your assertion that distributed winding capacitance degrades efficiency. My thoughts about this are ; Assume a 10 turn loop, between each turn there is a capacitance, so, you have a complete circuit, (L,C,R) there is current flowing through this circuit that is not flowing through the entire 10 turn loop. (this happens in the other 9 turns also) I think these extra currents flowing that don't make the entire 10 turn circuit increase the losses. Hi Mike, Capacitance does not bring loss. Loss ALWAYS resides in Resistance and nothing else. Between you and Bill, there appears to be a fixation on the loopS (emphasis on there being more than one). If you are going to blame them (that emphasis on there being more than one), and try to tie it to loss (that emphasis being naturally in Resistance, not Capacitance); then it follows it is in the natural increase in conductor Resistance that occurs when wires are spaced closer than 3 or 4 wire diameters to each other. When wires (or loops in this case) are in close proximity, the magnetic field of the near wire (or loop in this case, and each loop in proximity to the next) FORCES the current in that loop to the surface of the wire - INCREASING that conductor's Skin Resistance. Loss thus increases by proximity. Capacitance does too, but that is merely a correlating factor. Remember (and this is good advice, especially suited to Newsgroup rumors you may pick up): Correlation is NOT causality. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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