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Lots of useful replies - thanks to you all !
Dale W4OP: Your best bet for low inductance would probably be the carbon composition ...they look like a perfect cylinder- no bumps on the ends. Understood! I remember popping resistors that contained a blackish compound throughout the cylindrical body: I assume those were cabon comp. Also, correct me if I err, they tended to be LARGER that similarly powered resistors that had their heat-generating portion right under the skin. Dave Platt ) Or use one of the low-inductance metal-film/metal-foil types. and Tom Bruhns ) Metal-film and metal-oxide resistors are commonly done as a spiral like the carbon film ones you describe. I am satisfied that metal film/foil types do not come in rolled-up-foil geometry like some capacitors. This is good - no capacitive bypass. Also, avoids the same temperature gradient / heat dispersal issues of carbon comp. OTOH, still no guarantee that a metal film resistor is non-inductive. Cecil Moore ) I have some non-inductive wirewound resistors. They simply reverse the direction of the winding every so often to obtain canceling fields. I knew they existed, and saw them in catalogs, but never used them. I have been tempted to use a high power, low resistamce inductive WW resistor as a coil in a regen receiver, just to see how well one can compensate for losses.... I bet both regeneration and tuning will be VERY smooth ![]() Tom Bruhns ) I've put a couple 100-ohm 2-W metal-oxide resistors in parallel, with very short leads, and tested the combination for return loss and found it to be better than 20dB r.l. (1.22:1 SWR) out to beyond 150MHz. That pretty much cuts it! I can easily test my 16 x 100 ohm resistors as a couple of 50 ohm dummy loads on HF. After all, a decent HF match is all I really need, and chances that a low "random" SWR will result if great reactance is added atop resistance is quite modest. Thank you for pointing out the obvious to my obviously obnubilated mind! Filippo N1JPR/I2 http://filippo.ru.ru |