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Barrett wrote:
What sort of capacitors can I use in parallel in making some 7MHz and 3.7MHz wire wound traps? What voltage should they be and is the value that important? Max power will be 200 watts. Thanks Hi Barrett, I once fabricated just such a trap dipole. I started by cutting a dipole for 40m w/o traps. You'll need to adjust the resonant frequency of the traps to the 40 meter band, so that the antenna wire on the outer ends of the traps is electrically "cut off". Physically, this is not very easy to do with fixed value components. I used stubs of coaxial cable as capacitors across the inductors, and tuned them by trimming the ends with wire cutters. Most coaxial cables exhibit a capacitance of about 30pF/ft, and I believe mine were around 18" long... about 45pF (498 ohms reactance at 7 MHz). At 7.1 MHz, an inductance of 11.15uH resonates with 45pF. Any combination of LC that yields resonance on 40m is acceptable but, the more L you have, the shorter the overall length will need to be in order to resonate on 80m. To a point, larger wire size and turn spacing for the inductor will yield better Q. Unless you're running very high power, it really doesn't matter much what type of coax to use. The concern is voltage rating as, when operating on 40 meters, there will be higher voltage across the "capacitor". Larger diameter coax will have a greater voltage rating. Solid polyethylene coax will have a significantly higher rating than foamed polyethylene. From Belden... Type: RG8/U Part No: 8214 Dielectric: FPE (foamed polyethylene) Max RMS: 300V Capacitance: 26.0/ft Type: RG8/U Part No: 8237 Dielectric: PE (solid polyethylene) Max RMS: 3700V Capacitance: 29.5/ft Type: RG58A/U Part No: 8219 Dielectric: FPE (foamed polyethylene) Max RMS: 300V Capacitance: 26.5/ft Type: RG58A/U Part No: 8259 Dielectric: PE (solid polyethylene) Max RMS: 1400V Capacitance: 30.8/ft Even using solid PE coax, I had issues with arcing over the ends of the stubs when running a kilowatt (it was OK with only 100W.) I alleviated that problem by trimming only the outer jacket and shield, leaving a short stub of center conductor and dielectric protruding. When done, seal the coax stub with non-corrosive RTV, etc. I noticed that others made reference to the voltage rating of various capacitors. When AC is applied across a capacitor, a certain amount of current will flow thru it. Capacitors also have a rating in terms of current as well as voltage. While a TV doorknob capacitor has a voltage rating in tens of kilovolts, it won't handle much current. This is why you don't see them used (for example) as plate blocking capacitors in RF amplifiers, even though the DC voltage across them is much less than their rating. Where I work, we use lots of multilayer porcelain capacitors in industrial RF power sources (for CO2 lasers), mostly from American Technical Ceramics (http://www.atceramics.com/). Their datasheets list the current rating vs capacitance vs frequency. 73, Bryan WA7PRC |
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