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In message , Cecil Moore
writes Roy Lewallen wrote: Bear in mind that the impedance of multiple turns is proportional to the square of the number of turns. So 5 turns, for example, through a single core gives you the same impedance as 25 cores strung along the Something that fooled me is the way Amidon specifies "one-turn" impedance for beads in their brochure. Their "one-turn" for beads is a wire running through the center hole, wrapped around the outside, and back through the center hole. (I would count that as two turns and would say one-turn is just a wire running straight through the core.) As a result, for their FB-77-5621 bead, for instance, they specify 270 ohms per turn. If one simply threads these beads over RG-58, the impedance is about 1/4 of that amount, i.e. about 67 ohms per bead, requiring about 15 of them to get to 1000 ohms. As Roy says, ten turns of coax on an FT-240-77 core is roughly equivalent to 100 FB-77-5621 beads strung over coax. Interestingly enough, Amidon specifies "one-turn" on an FT-240-77 core to be 76 ohms, obviously a different kind of "one-turn" than that of the 270 ohms for an FB-77-5621. Yes, '1 turn' on a torroid is 'once through the centre'. For any coil to work as an inductor, there must be a return path somewhere. For a torroid, this has to be 'around the outside'. As the permeability of the core is generally much greater than that of air, it doesn't matter much whether the wire is close to the surface of the ferrite, or very slack indeed. With a single turn, the return path could be quite circuitous (literally). -- Ian |
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