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Please don't consider Chris as speaking for me, or accurately
presenting everything I said. We all know how easy it is to lift selective portions of long exchanges and make things sound any way we like. The original topic was Sevik's 4:1 balun on a single core, where that balun is made up of two 1:1 ratio choke baluns with parallel inputs and series outputs. The imputs are excited in a transmission line mode (differentially) and the outputs in series. The balun cores provide only ground isolation through common mode impedance. I have a similar balun built by MFJ, and it has terrible balance. It actually is an offset voltage voltage balun. Early on I specifically excluded transformer-type baluns. I think the problem is Chris thinks we can feed a transmission line end-to-end on a single conductor and contain energy within the line area. As far as I see, there is nothing causing the line to operate in a TEM mode, but it behaves only as a simple 1:1 transformer. I beleive this is at the root of the poor efficiency and poor SWR bandwidth of Chris' "balun". The bandwidth problem would be caused because a transmission line in TEM mode would have distributed capacitance cancelling series inductance of the leads, a transformer winding does not. This also gives rise to the distributed capacitance tending to pull the load side to the voltage balance of the source winding, causing a problem with high frequency balance. The isolation transformer method has the advantage of much better low frequency isolation and allowing a single core, but falls on its face for SWR response, power handling for a given core size, and high frequency balance and common mode isolation. I think the real argument or disagreement is if the lines in a parallel or coaxial wound primary and secondary like Chris used are in TEM mode, or simply acting as a transformer. My contention is it is a transformer, and those who think any two parallel or concentric conductors when fed start-to-finish or tend-to-end on one conductor forces a TEM mode are not viewing the system correctly. It will be interesting to see what others think. I have a partial analysis on my web site in a 4:1 balun analysis , and I'll be adding more information to that as time permits. Please, just the technical facts. I'll speak for myself. 73 Tom |
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