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![]() Mike I'll top post this because it might not be appropriate for your situation. I dont know what you consider "simple equipment" and I dont know what equipment you already have. I'm a *do it yourselfer* and recently built a simple slotted line from Home Depot tubing, and picked up a "very affordable" ($25.00) generator and voltmeter ($20.00)at the TRW HAM swap meet. This set up allows me to determine the impedance of the baluns and dipoles I'm interested in at 137 MHz. Iy may be that the slotted line would be more difficult to build for 432. And the idea of constructing something like this isnt of interest to you. But, it sure works well at 137 MHz for evaluating ferrite tubes. Jerry "MikeN" wrote in message ... Back on 25/04/03 re "Choke balun impedance recommmendations" Roy Llewellan wrote: "By all means, the slide rule is fine. To measure the common mode impedance of a choke balun, simply wind a piece of wire on the core with the same number of turns as you'll use for the actual balun. Connect one end of the wire to the center conductor of the antenna analyzer connector and the other to the connector shell. Read the impedance at the frequency of interest. Or if you prefer, you can wind it with a short piece of the actual coax you'll be using. Connect the two coax conductors together on each end of the winding, and measure as you would with a single wire. If the impedance is out of the analyzer's range, you can use a different number of turns and the relationship that the impedance is proportional to the square of the number of turns. Use the same method to measure a W2DU type balun (ferrite cores slipped over a coax line). If the measurement is out of range, measure a different number of cores and extrapolate -- the impedance is directly proportional to the number of cores. Roy Lewallen, W7EL My queries:- Would this method give meaningful results if used at 70 cms using the UHF range on something like a MFJ antenna analyser? I could pop various beads onto a short piece of coax and determine the relative effectiveness, but how good would this be for absolute results? Thanks |
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