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#1
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Hi all
Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink tubing, varnish layer ? tnx oh6io |
#2
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Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element
and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink tubing, varnish layer ? The traditional approach is to use glazed ceramic insulators, I believe. -- 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! |
#3
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KBa wrote:
Hi all Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink tubing, varnish layer ? tnx oh6io Such a problem is going to come from one of two things: Too much power for too little separtion and arcing; use wider spacing and less power. Accumulated filth and moisture leading to leakage leading to carbonization; heat shrink tubing or tape like Coax-Seal to keep the path clean and dry. |
#4
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![]() "KBa" wrote in message ... # Hi all # Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element # and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? # Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes # which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one # fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) # How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink # tubing, varnish layer ? # tnx oh6io I'll leave the specifics of your question to the experts. But, worth mentioning is that once you have selected a material, plop some in a microwave along with something like a a container of water. Then see if your insulating material stays cool. Wayne W5GIE |
#5
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On 8/30/2012 4:15 PM, Wayne wrote:
"KBa" wrote in message ... # Hi all # Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element # and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? # Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes # which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one # fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) # How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink # tubing, varnish layer ? # tnx oh6io I'll leave the specifics of your question to the experts. But, worth mentioning is that once you have selected a material, plop some in a microwave along with something like a a container of water. Then see if your insulating material stays cool. Wayne W5GIE Which is valid at the microwave oven frequency. Might be relevant at HF, or more likely, not. tom K0TAR |
#6
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![]() "tom" wrote in message . net... On 8/30/2012 4:15 PM, Wayne wrote: "KBa" wrote in message ... # Hi all # Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element # and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? # Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes # which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one # fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) # How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink # tubing, varnish layer ? # tnx oh6io I'll leave the specifics of your question to the experts. But, worth mentioning is that once you have selected a material, plop some in a microwave along with something like a a container of water. Then see if your insulating material stays cool. Wayne W5GIE # Which is valid at the microwave oven frequency. Might be relevant at # HF, or more likely, not. # tom # K0TAR I'm sticking with the test being relevant at HF. A material that does not heat up at microwave, would be unlikely to heat up at HF. At any rate, the test can be done for free. |
#7
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73, John K4KQZ |
#8
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In message , k4kqz
writes 'Jeff[_15_ Wrote: ;795578']- Which is valid at the microwave oven frequency. Might be relevant at HF, or more likely, not. tom K0TAR- It is highly unlikely that a material that is OK at 2GHz will be worse at HF. Jeff Actually, a material can be perfectly fine at microwave frequencies and bad at HF. And vice versa. The microwave oven test should only be considered a *very rough* indication of material suitability. Care to suggest one or two examples of materials where RF losses are higher at HF? -- Ian |
#9
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El 30-08-12 20:49, KBa escribió:
Hi all Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) How to improve insulation ? Ptfe-shield over fiberglass rod, heat shrink tubing, varnish layer ? tnx oh6io Assuming power of about 1 kW and a HW dipole (say 60 Ohms), the voltage will be about 350Vp. I can hardly imagine that a plastic gap of 0.05m will degrade to failure because of tracking. Make sure you have UV resistant rods, and/or add some layers of UV resistant (marine quality) coating. -- Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl Please remove abc first in case of PM |
#10
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![]() In article . net, Wimpie wrote: Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) Assuming power of about 1 kW and a HW dipole (say 60 Ohms), the voltage will be about 350Vp. I can hardly imagine that a plastic gap of 0.05m will degrade to failure because of tracking. On the other hand, if the original poster is attempting to drive this antenna off-resonance, with open-wire feedline and a wide- impedance-range transmatch / "antenna tuner", then it's entirely possible that the feedpoint will sometimes be "looking into" a much higher impedance, and that a matched drive will result in very high voltages at the feedpoint. Even a coax-feed antenna might have this problem, I suppose, if the split element is being driven by something like a delta match which has a relatively high impedance- transformation ratio. From what I see in a short Google-search, fiberglass *can* be hygroscopic, depending on what resin was used to bind the fiberglass. A fiberglass rod which was made with a somewhat-hygroscopic resin (e.g. polyamide) might tend to behave badly in the face of high RF voltages, whereas a rod made with a non-hygroscopic resin might be fine unless dirty or wet. -- 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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