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Roy Lewallen wrote in
: Owen Duffy wrote: The '259B is no doubt a handy device, but very limited for measuring components. Have you tried to measure at an inductance that has more than 250 ohms of reactance at some frequency of interest? Have you tried to explore self resonance of a coil..., invariably it runs into the same problem of inductive reactance going off scale way below the point at which self resonance bites in. When talking about ferrite or powdered iron cored inductors of reactance over 200 ohms, where mu is frequency dependent and flux dependent, I find the '259B nearly useless. I've had just the opposite experience. I find the 259B to be extremely useful in determining ferrite types and the impedances of inductors. Generally a single "turn" (pass through the hole) is adequate for measurement. For most toroidal inductors the impedance is closely proportional to the square of the number of turns, so the value of multi-turn inductors can be extrapolated with reasonable accuracy. Of course, two or three turns can be used for measurement if the unit can't resolve the impedance of a single turn. The frequency dependence of the mu and loss is just why the 259B is so useful -- I can find the impedance at the frequency or range of frequencies it'll be used at. Roy, with respect, you are describing work-arounds for the inability of the '259B to make useful measurements on inductors over about 200 ohms reactance. Sure, the instrument can be used to characterise a core, and that information extrapolated to design an inductor with higher reactance, but you cannot measure the larger inductance directly, or discover reliably, the properties of the larger inductor like self resonance effects, or loss. I won't address defensive posts by others who seem to have chosen to ignore my qualification "When talking about ferrite or powdered iron cored inductors of reactance over 200 ohms". An example of the traps: a chap recently confirmed to me that indeed mu is frequency sensitive as demonstrated by the '259B measurement of the inductance of an inductor over HF which showed inductance was highly frequency dependent. The problem was that the inductive reactance was over 250 ohms at most frequencies of measurement, and the '259B calculates inductance without warning that the value is unreliable because of the magnitude of reactance on which the inductance is calculated. Try measuring a 30uH coil's inductance over 2-30MHz using a '259B and you will see what I mean. Owen |
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