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On Sat, 09 Jun 2012 09:45:30 +0100, Jeff wrote:
Put a sample in the microwave and see if it get hot, it may be an insulator but it also may be lossy at rf. Jeff That's a good way to determine if it will work at 2.4GHz. However, this is for HF, which is about 1/500th of 2.4GHz. Some insulators that fail at 2.4Ghz (PVC, nylon, phenolic, wood, bakelite), work just fine at HF frequencies. In general, if it passes at 2.4GHz, it will probably work at HF. However, if it fails, it may still work at HF. There's also the potential problem of volatiles and solvents. Some of the components in the body putty are hygroscopic (absorbs moisture). When baked in a microwave oven, the water and solvents may boil, resulting in cracking or crumbling. Residual ethanol solvent might make an interesting bang. Microwave baking is a fair test to see if the body filler will handle 1KW of RF at 2.4GHz, but might be a bit overkill for 200 watts at HF. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#2
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On Sat, 09 Jun 2012 19:47:03 +0100, Jeff wrote:
On 09/06/2012 17:53, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sat, 09 Jun 2012 09:45:30 +0100, wrote: Put a sample in the microwave and see if it get hot, it may be an insulator but it also may be lossy at rf. Jeff That's a good way to determine if it will work at 2.4GHz. However, this is for HF, which is about 1/500th of 2.4GHz. Some insulators that fail at 2.4Ghz (PVC, nylon, phenolic, wood, bakelite), work just fine at HF frequencies. In general, if it passes at 2.4GHz, it will probably work at HF. However, if it fails, it may still work at HF. Loss tangent does not generally vary much with frequency unless there is a lot of water content or similar, that is to say that it is linear against frequency, so it is not a case of pass or fail, it is just how hot does it get when scaled to HF. Loss tangent (dissipation factor) can increase or decrease with frequency depending on material. It's measured at 1KHz, but can be almost anything by the time it gets to microwave frequencies. For example, glass: http://psec.uchicago.edu/glass/tanDelta_vs_freq_edited.bmp There's also the potential problem of volatiles and solvents. Some of the components in the body putty are hygroscopic (absorbs moisture). Well if they do they will not be good even at HF. Time to define "good". The OP proposes to use Bondo at the low impedance end of a gamma match. That's 50 ohms. It would considerable conductivity to put anything in parallel with 50 ohms to have an effect. Even placing an obvious conductor between the 50 terminals isn't going to do much. For example, I could place a water balloon full of salt water between the 50 ohm terminals. As long as rubber provides sufficient insulation, there will be no dielectric loss. It might arc over or add some capacitance depending on size, but it won't conduct RF. However, were he to propose using Bondo at the junction of the matching tap section and the tuning capacitor where it hits the driven element, there will be problems. The gamma match is a series resonant tuned circuit at this point with high voltage across the capacitor. In effect, the Bondo would act as part of the capacitor dielectric at high voltages. Bondo is not suitable for building capacitors. When baked in a microwave oven, the water and solvents may boil, resulting in cracking or crumbling. Not a problem if it is just a test sample, but if they absorb water they will be a poor insulator. Not exactly. A water soaked insulator is certain a potential problem. Yet, there are perfectly usable insulators that contain water. For example, concrete, bricks, and some pottery are contain considerable water, but are tolerable insulators, especially if glazed. HF has no effect on the water because there is insufficient energy at 2-30MHz to convince the water molecule to vibrate. The higher the frequency, the higher the energy: E = Plank's-constant * speed-o-light / wavelength While building an HF antenna structure out of bricks is feasible, I would not suggest you place a brick in a microwave oven. It will get hot and eventually crumble as the water evaporates. For a higher speed example, just hit a brick or concrete block with a oxy-acetylene torch and be prepared to duck as pieces fly out as the water explodes. Residual ethanol solvent might make an interesting bang. I think we must be thinking about a different type of filler, all of the glass fibre fillers I have come across do not contain ethanol, they are 2 part; styrene monomer and organic peroxide hardener Please re-read my summor of the contents from the MSDS sheets. The stuff is 30-60% ethanol solvent by weight. That's needed to keep the mix flexible and compliant. As it evaporates, the Bondo hardens. However, if some residue remains, such as the result of applying the Bondo in too thick a layer, there is a real possibility of a gas explosion. Jeff -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#3
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On Sat, 09 Jun 2012 13:20:26 -0700, Jeff Liebermann
wrote: Not exactly. A water soaked insulator is certain a potential problem. Yet, there are perfectly usable insulators that contain water. For example, concrete, bricks, and some pottery are contain considerable water, but are tolerable insulators, especially if glazed. HF has no effect on the water because there is insufficient energy at 2-30MHz to convince the water molecule to vibrate. The higher the frequency, the higher the energy: E = Plank's-constant * speed-o-light / wavelength While building an HF antenna structure out of bricks is feasible, I would not suggest you place a brick in a microwave oven. It will get hot and eventually crumble as the water evaporates. Well, I lied. Apparently it only gets hot and does not crumble: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCRBeo2hsmU (7 mins). This has to be the most boring YouTube video ever. However, watching the author get burned by the brick when he tries to remove the brick from the oven is priceless. Also, not that power line insulators are quite hygroscopic (absorbs moisture). The surface glazing is a good moisture barrier so the insulator insides remain quite dry. However, even a small crack in the glazing will eventually introduce enough water into the inside to cause arcing. Please re-read my summor of the contents from the MSDS sheets. Oops... that should be "summary". -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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