Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ian:
Yes, you inject a VERY GOOD point here--I realize my "definitions" are a bit blurry. And, indeed, scanning the internet suggests there are some others out there suffering the same. What can we all agree are proper definitions to balun, "rf transformer", etc... I admit I have not ever set up a solid foundation of knowledge here--just used ideas, plans, etc which others have made available... and referred to them by the names given... this leaves me at a loss while I investigate. John "Ian White GM3SEK" wrote in message ... Chris Trask wrote: 1. That it is simply a 2:1 transformer with an isolated primary and secondary? No. It is a pair of 1:1 transformers on a single core. I can make it work equally well by making the two transformers on separate cores. I can also make it with a pair of equal length coaxial cables. Both of these realisations defeat his claim that it is a 2:1 transformer. If it were a mains or an audio transformer with four identical windings, two primaries in parallel and two secondaries in series, most people wouldn't hesitate to call that a "2:1" (voltage ratio) transformer. You could also choose to call it "a pair of 1:1 transformers on a single core" and that would also be valid, though I don't believe that would be most people's preferred description. The same output voltages can *also* be obtained by a different method, by appropriately wiring two completely separate 1:1 transformers, but that doesn't affect the way we should think about the transformer on a single core. But at the same time, neither of them answer his claim that it is impossible to make a 4:1 current balun on a single core with a pair of 1:1 transformers. Agreed. 2. That it is not a true transmission line transformer, because your transmission-line windings are not being fed with opposite polarities across the *same* end? This isn't even a gray area. We're making a BALUN, in other words a transformer that has an UNbalanced port and a BALanced port, and in this case fully meeting the definition of a current balun. If we were to accept the above statement, then we would have no choice except to conclude that in no circumstances could we make a BALUN with transmission line transformers because in all cases of BALUNs one port is fed unbalanced. I was talking about TLT's, not baluns. Some baluns are TLT but others are not. Making transmission line transformers is not difficult, although Tom is making it appear as though it's some sort of great mustery. For a length of transmission line that is sufficiently short with respect to wavelength, meaning less than an eighth of a wavelength in practice, the following rules are observed: 1. The voltage across the one conductor is equal to the voltage of the other conductor, both in magnitude and in phase. 2. The current in the one conductor is equal in magnitude but oppostite in phase to the current in the other conductor. These basic understandings of transmission line transformers are well established and understood. Gary Breed brought the concept down to the essentials in: Breed, Gary, "Transmission Line Transformer Basics," Applied Microwave & Wireless, Vol. 10, No. 4, May 1998, p. 60. It all comes down to a difference between what is known by way of established theory and practice versus trying to convince people that everything we know is wrong. Sorry, but it all seems to come down to the definitions of "current balun" and "transmission line transformer" that one chooses to adopt. Rather than referencing those definitions, please can you quote them here, in full? -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Long/random-wire balun and grounding Q (longish) | Antenna | |||
FS: sma-to-bnc custom fit rubber covered antenna adapter | Equipment | |||
Current in loading coil, EZNEC - helix | Antenna | |||
Serious radiation questin | Antenna | |||
Smith Chart Quiz | Antenna |