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John Ferrell wrote: I have been successful at modeling and then constructing transmitter matching circuits at low power with common sizes of capacitors. Now I want to move up to the 1 KW power level. Inductors are easy enough to homebrew but capacitors are both expensive and scarce. Anyone have ideas or maybe experience in this area? DigiKey has a good selection of High Voltage units (3 KV Plus) at modest cost but considering their size and the losses expected in the capacitors I don't think they can dissipate the heat... People working on "small magnetic loop" transmitting antennas have developed some homebrew approaches. These antennas present a highly inductive feedpoint impedance, and must be tuned to a high-Q match using a variable capacitor which can stand off very high voltages. I've seen at least three types described: (1) "Trombone" capacitors. These typically consist of a U-shaped piece of copper pipe (adjustable element), whose ends slide into two longer pieces of larger-diameter pipe that act as the connection terminals for the capacitor. The sliding pipe is insulated from the outer pipe - its ends are wrapped in sheets of a suitable dielectric (Teflon or Kapton sheet is often used). The cap can be adjusted by sliding the U in or out of the terminal pieces... often done via a worm-gear motor drive, attached to the center of the bottom of the U. (2) "Butterfly" capacitors... two stator plates, one completely- insulated rotor plate, and suitable dielectric insulation sheets between them. (3) "Sliding glass sheet" capacitors... plate glass dielectric, with a fixed metal sheet sitting below (as one terminal) and a metal sheet glued to the top of the glass (as the other terminal). Slide the glass sheet back and forth on the bottom metal sheet to vary the capacitance. Researching the dielectric and high-voltage properties of leaded window glass, borosilicate glass (Pyrex and similar), acrylic, polycarbonate, and Teflon sheets might be worthwhile. Other (non-homebrew, but available-surplus) choices are large-gap air variable caps, and "doorknob" fixed-value transmitting capacitors. The former are often known as "cheese slicers"... and I've actually seen some people home-brew them, using either sheet aluminum or brass, or copper-clad PCB material for the stator and rotor plates. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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