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"John Smith" wrote in message
... wrote: Transformer oil. Try your local power company. typically they will either sell it to you, or, sometimes when they find out that you only need a gallon or so, they'll just give it to you. Mine did. - 'Doc No one knows about silicone oils? Break down is a few hundreds of degrees, good thermal conductivity, ... benign to all components, including any gaskets, I can possibly think of, etc. Also, if you are into health/toxic concerns, purchase a food grade ... Regards, JS Silicone oils are excellent from a health standpoint and usually very good from a flammability standpoint. However, the Cantenna relies on natural convection of the oil for cooling and the higher viscosity of commonly available silicone oils will limit the power handling capability of the Cantenna. Remember that the Cantenna must be de-rated when used for long duty cycles, and a high viscosity oil will lower the power rating still more. Also remember that silicone oils are not cheap (and my buddy at Dow would only send me small samples). I would suggest using modern RF terminations made by Bourns and other companies. These are designed to be bolted to a large heatsink. The CHF9838CNF series is rated for 50 ohms, 250 watts, VSWR below 1.1 from DC to 2.2 GHz. It only costs $27.50 in single lot quantities. I think this is higher than the continuous rating of the Cantenna. I don't know for sure as I disposed of my Cantenna years ago. Digi-Key sells these Bourns terminations if you want one. I had used transformer oil given to me by the local electric cooperative. I didn't learn until a few years later that the oil was contaminated with Aroclor, a PCB oil. Proper disposal was easy for me as I then worked in the research labs of a major chemical company that had an EPA licensed incinerator specifically rated for PCB destruction. Even so, I had to repackage the oil into special disposal bottles and give the incinerator operators instructions that only one of the bottles could be burned daily. Before anyone asks can they send their oil to me for disposal, I left that company over 10 years ago and am now retired, so the answer will be no. I did quite a bit of research on trade names of PCB containing oils. In fact, the EPA's list found at http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/hazard/t...bs/aroclor.htm is partly a result of my study. About a third of the trade names on this list were unknown to the EPA until I provided them to the Atlanta EPA office. Barry L. Ornitz, PhD WA4VZQ |
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