Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
john Wiener wrote:
... I've never read of using a 1:1 unun right after a 4:1 balun to minimize RF on the outer coax. My thinking is that the 4:1 balun acts as a voltage type and will do nothing to ameliorate this. So, I will put some ferrite rings or snap on ferrites just past the 4:1 balun on the coax. Does this sound like a reasonable solution? John AB8O If you use a 4:1 Ruthroff, it would be a voltage balun ... if you use a 4:1 Guanella it would be a current balun ... the 1:1 current balun is probably more useful behind a Ruthroff ... but hey, once you have tried all these possible combinations, you can speak from experience! grin If going from 300 ohm to 50 ohm, perhaps you would choose a 6:1. Or, just go with the 4:1 now and when you need some diversion, later, try the 6:1 to see what improvments can be had and if the loss in this design is acceptable to you ... etc. Anyway, in this document is a 6:1 (actually 6.25:1, resulting in 312ohm to 50 ohm) made from two 4:1 baluns (I would think Guanella ununs ... the 4:1 can be made from two 1:1, each wound on the opposite side of toroid core, reversing coil directions on one side. This could also be accomplished with 4 ferrite rods ... a 1:1 balun wound on each rod, two rods combined to make a 4:1 balun, then these "two units" combined to construct the 6.25:1 balun ... Regards, JS |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Carolina Windom using 300 ohm ladderline | Antenna | |||
Results: Carolina Windom | Antenna | |||
Ferrite cores instead of a 1:1 current-choke UnUn for a Carolina Windom | Antenna | |||
FA: Carolina Windom 160M | Swap | |||
Carolina Windom | Antenna |