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On May 19, 11:25*am, Cecil Moore wrote:
On May 19, 9:03*am, Wimpie wrote: From simulation, but now a pi filter C=6pF, L=72u, C=6pF, load = 2570 Ohms You just proved one of my points. Inventing impedors that do not exist in reality in order to rationalize the real-world delay through a real- world loading coil is exactly what I have been complaining about. Are the imaginary lumped-circuit capacitors, to which you are forced to resort, part of the actual impedance in reality or a figment of your imagination? http://hamwaves.com/antennas/inductance/corum.pdf "The concept of coil 'self-capacitance' is an attempt to circumvent transmission line effects on small coils when the current distribution begins to depart from its DC behavior." About the capacitors you added above it says: "Of course, this is merely a statistical determination appropriate for computations ... and *not at all a physical quantity*." The reason that the source voltage and source current are in phase in the example is because the load resistor equals the Z0 of the coil which is functioning in transmission line mode with a VF = 0.019, i.e. like a transmission line, it is indeed 0.1167 wavelengths long electrically. I have verified such (within a certain degree of accuracy) through bench experiments. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com First I'll point out that the model Wim used doesn't match "the concept of coil self-capacitance," so it's not clear that the rest of what you wrote is relevant. Now, what do you do about your coils when you discover that they do NOT behave like a TEM transmission line? Indeed they do not; it's pretty easy to verify from measurements on real coils and real circuits. It seems like now you are stuck, because you (seem to) have a lot of trouble looking at a circuit and understanding what's really important and what isn't, with regard to performance in a particular application. Sometimes it's appropriate to use a model that goes well beyond a simple transmission line model of a coil; sometimes the simple transmission line model is far more complex than you need. See Wim's previous posting about the value of understanding that. FWIW, I understand perfectly well where the capacitances Wim put into his model come from. I know exactly how I would estimate them from a particular physical configuration, and I suppose Wim does something very similar to what I would. They come very much from the real physical world, not from our imaginations. Cheers, Tom |
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