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On 11/1/2015 2:02 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sun, 1 Nov 2015 03:02:44 -0500, rickman wrote: I'm not certain what you are saying. Short summary: 1. DC resistance does not change with soldering. 2. Temp and mechanical stability of the loop is greatly improved by soldering and welding. The stronger the joint, the more stable. 3. Soldering did not seem to affect the Q of the loop, although my method was rather sloppy and results uncertain. That's a lot more clear, but why do you say the "temp" stability of the loop was improved? But first, you mean compared to doing *nothing* at the joints to actually join the materials, right? I can't see how "no connection" is an option. I would expect the durn thing to fall down and if it didn't fall down the joints would oxidize to the point of not working. The part you quote sounds like he measured the DC resistance of the loop which has little to do with the AC resistance at RF. Correct. We're dealing with skin effect in a transmit loop. I guess this begs the question of why are magnetic loop builders NOT silver plating their loops? If skin effect is so important, then why are many home made loops using unplated and often unprotected copper? Electroless silver is easy to do and fairly inexpensive. I vaguely recall that it's difficult to plate electroless silver thicker than the RF skin depth on the lower bands, but I don't recall. That would be a lot of work for a 12 foot tall antenna even if not terribly expensive, for very little gain, about 5% conductivity which is cut in half by the skin effect. Do you really want to go to all that trouble for a 2.5% improvement when you can just use copper with a 2.5% larger OD to achieve the same benefit? In particular the solder joints end up being literally undetectable with DC because there is a large parallel surface between the 45° unions I assume he used and the pipe. Solder in this space joins the two copper parts with a much larger cross section reducing the resistance of a path through a more limited area of contact. Hardly. Even if there was an air gap between the overlapping copper sections, there would be enough capacitance in between for the antenna to operate normally. Of course, the tuning would change, and it might arc over, but it would still have roughly the same Q. Really? You want to design a copper antenna with series capacitors scattered in your loop? Yes, it would not just affect the tuning, but the tuning range and vary with all sorts of changes like temperature and humidity. That strikes me as a crazy way to build an antenna. But with RF currents the path will only be on the outside surface of the conductor. So without the solder the connection will be through a limited amount of area but the same is true for the solder joint since only the outer few mils of the pipe are used depending on the frequency involved. If the overlapping copper connections is really deemed a labyrinth, which increases the effective length of the loop, it would produce a rather drastic change in tuning. I've noticed a tuning change as the loop is moved before soldering but not much. The lengths involved are quite short when compared to the overall length of the loop. The skin effect of different materials seems to be current issue: http://owenduffy.net/calc/SkinDepth.htm Looks like the higher resistivity of 63/37 solder, compared to copper, required more skin depth. Adding some silver to the solder should fix that. I don't know what "required more skin depth" implies. I have yet to find a conductor that wasn't thick enough to provide 95% of the max potential conductivity down to 70 kHz. The skin depth goes by the square root of the resistivity, so there is minimal difference because of that. In any case, the tiny amount of solder area, compared to the area of the loop, isn't going to dramatically increase the loop resistance. BINGO! Let's try by example. I take two copper overlapping fittings and grind off some copper so that when stuck together, they have an air gap in between. I then fill the gap with solder. The added DC resistance will be the bulk resistivity of the solder times the surface area, which is small, but potentially significant when we're dealing with milliohms. However, the RF path only has to bridge the solder filled gap between the copper pipes. The increased RF path is just the difference in areas between the inner tube OD, and the outer tube ID. In other words, not much added RF path length from soldering. Again, no one cares about the DC resistance. The issue is not the volume of solder in the overlap which would only be useful for mechanical support, but in the *length* of the solder path at the outer skin. Instead of an over lapped case, if two pipes were butted with a tiny gap between them (and a pipe inside for mechanical support) the length of the gap filled with solder would be tiny compared to the length of the copper pipe. So even if the solder if four times more resistive it will be swamped by the 100's of times greater length of copper. To then consider the case of the overlapped joints, the RF current will only flow in the outer 3 skin depths (roughly) and see only the solder making the fillet at the end of the overlap. If high resistance solder is used you would want to remove as much of this fillet as possible and sand off any solder on the surface of the tube. The solder inside the overlap would be inconsequential other than mechanical support. The issue I was addressing is the difference between a solid tube and soldered joints. My explanation, admittedly a guess(tm), is that there's little difference in DC and RF resistance, but a substantial difference in mechanical and electrical stability. I don't see any reason for a difference mechanically. We aren't talking about a supporting structure for a house, it only has to hold itself up and usually is supported at two points. I have no idea why you think soldered joint would have poor electrical stability. As to the strength issue and temperature effects, the entire loop would expand evenly and so no real stress would be on the solder other than the differential expansion of the two metals. I ran my IR thermometer around a copper loop to see if there was any unexpected heating. It was tricky, because the RF drove my IR thermometer nuts. So, I had to xmit 10 mins, turn off the transmitter, and then quickly take measurements. Hot spots were difficult to see because the thermally conductive copper would distribute the heat very quickly. Still, I managed to see tiny increases in temperature around some soldered joints, and a rather large jump where I had dissimilar metals (stainless hose clamps in the T-match). I think the hot spots in the joints were caused by the lower thermal conductivity of the solder compared to copper. In a loop I was thinking of using tin-lead solder for the overlap area of the joints and then finishing off the visible portion of the joint with silver solder. I wasn't aware silver solder is stronger than other solder. If so, I might just use it for the entire soldering process. I forgot to include a link to the strength of various solder compositions. http://alasir.com/reference/solder_alloys/ On the top table, not the approximately 80% increase in tensile strength for solder compositions that include silver. Although I do it often, I'm not a big fan of mixing solders. I'm actually thinking of using aluminum tubing and silver plating the joint areas. I've seen a video on doing this, although they used copper in the video they say it works with aluminum and allows it to be soldered easily if plated thick enough. If you build the loop in sections, such as in the original article I cited: http://www.nonstopsystems.com/radio/frank_radio_antenna_magloop.htm plating the loop in sections is easy. Plating a single piece loop, made on a tubing bender, is not so easy. I've copper plated aluminum tubing, but haven't had a need to try silver. No advice, but I suggest you calculate the skin depth and make sure your plating is thick enough. Why would I want the silver to be as thick as the skin depth? The silver is just at the contact areas to provide a solderable surface, not for the conductivity. The aluminum is plenty good for that. The point is to use a large diameter aluminum tube to get a low resistance. Then to connect the sections the silver plating allows soldering. Tuning capacitors are usually aluminum so I'm thinking it would be better with all the same material as long as there aren't any chemical reactions between the aluminum and the solder. I've been told aluminum likes to mess with other metals. Visit your local hardware store and you'll find all kinds of bonded copper to aluminum lugs, adapters, crimps, corrosion inhibitors etc. Al to Cu transitions are common problem in house wiring. You can plate copper on aluminum yourself, but it usually requires an initial zinc coating: http://www.finishing.com/0400-0599/555.shtml I've copper plated aluminum foil, but nothing heavy or large. Again, I suggest you want your skin depth (plating to 3 times the skin depth is good enough). I have no interest in plating copper on zinc on aluminum. If I can do silver that seems like the way to go. Personally, I think you're overdoing it and are hung up on minutiae and detail. Optimizing the loop resistance to the last remaining decimal point might be useful after you have a reproducible initial design, or if you're trying to build the ultimate magnetic loop antenna. However, the various dimensional aspects of the design are far more important. How big a loop? How to match it to 50 ohms? What's the takeoff angle? Tuning range and bandwidth? Start he http://www.aa5tb.com/loop.html http://www.aa5tb.com/aa5tb_loop_v1.22a.xls See Note 2. I'm trying to identify significant issues and the easy steps to mitigate them. If it is not clear how significant an issue is, but the step to mitigate it is easy, then why not do it. I can't see *not* soldering the connections. The tuning capacitor will be aluminum. To avoid connections between different metals the entire unit will be aluminum. So I will need to solder the aluminum unless it is easier to weld which I'm pretty sure is not the case. I think the silver plating and silver solder is the short and easy path to an optimum solution with low cost. But the jury is still out. -- Rick |
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