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On 10/30/2015 11:40 AM, rickman wrote:
On 10/30/2015 12:01 PM, John S wrote: On 10/30/2015 10:46 AM, rickman wrote: On 10/30/2015 9:07 AM, Jeff wrote: I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with ?r change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Me thinks you are overlooking the very high voltages involved. I would have thought that glass was a good candidate and in plentiful supply in various thicknesses, and would withstand very high voltages. The Er is in the range 5 to 10 depending on the actual type. It is the high voltages that makes the dielectric useful. No, it is the increase in capacitance that makes the dielectric useful. That sounds rather argumentative. I explain this in the next paragraph which you seem to be agreeing with. So which is it? Your posts are beginning to make me think you are a troll. Every person who responds gets a provocative answer from you. If you already have in mind the answer you want, why ask? |
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