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#51
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![]() "John Popelish" wrote in message ... wrote: John Popelish wrote: SNIP At low frequency, I understand how this is a good approach (though this discussion was about the W2DU style choke balun). But at higher frequencies, I am concerned that the turn to turn capacitance might provide a low impedance path that parallels the choke. A string of beads does not have this problem. Hi John "For what its worth", I have wounf the coax around a single ferrite toroid with the exact amount of turns and spacing so the impedance along the conductor of the coax outer shield was maximum, as in parallel resonance. I cant claim that it does any better job than any other "1:1 balun", but it worked for me. My point is - The turn to turn "stray" capacitance doesnt necessarily have to be a source of performance degradation. Jerry |
#52
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Jerry Martes wrote:
"John Popelish" wrote in message ... wrote: John Popelish wrote: SNIP At low frequency, I understand how this is a good approach (though this discussion was about the W2DU style choke balun). But at higher frequencies, I am concerned that the turn to turn capacitance might provide a low impedance path that parallels the choke. A string of beads does not have this problem. Hi John "For what its worth", I have wounf the coax around a single ferrite toroid with the exact amount of turns and spacing so the impedance along the conductor of the coax outer shield was maximum, as in parallel resonance. I cant claim that it does any better job than any other "1:1 balun", but it worked for me. My point is - The turn to turn "stray" capacitance doesnt necessarily have to be a source of performance degradation. I think of it as more of a upper limit. Once you are above resonance, the choke action has to drop. And if you are using one of the low frequency ferrites, the resonance isn't going to be anything to write home about either. ;-) |
#53
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![]() "John Popelish" wrote in message ... Jerry Martes wrote: "John Popelish" wrote in message ... wrote: John Popelish wrote: SNIP At low frequency, I understand how this is a good approach (though this discussion was about the W2DU style choke balun). But at higher frequencies, I am concerned that the turn to turn capacitance might provide a low impedance path that parallels the choke. A string of beads does not have this problem. Hi John "For what its worth", I have wounf the coax around a single ferrite toroid with the exact amount of turns and spacing so the impedance along the conductor of the coax outer shield was maximum, as in parallel resonance. I cant claim that it does any better job than any other "1:1 balun", but it worked for me. My point is - The turn to turn "stray" capacitance doesnt necessarily have to be a source of performance degradation. I think of it as more of a upper limit. Once you are above resonance, the choke action has to drop. And if you are using one of the low frequency ferrites, the resonance isn't going to be anything to write home about either. ;-) Hi John I am not smart enough to be able to give instructions to *anyone*. But, I have thought of "hi Q" resonance something I want to avoid anyway in making a Balun. I was worried that a high Q resonant circuit without sisnificant loss might assist coupling to the feed line if/when that feed line was close to some multiple of a half wave. Anyway, you get the idea I was trying to address concerning any worry about stray capacitance ruining the Balun performance. Jerry |
#54
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![]() John Popelish wrote: At low frequency, I understand how this is a good approach (though this discussion was about the W2DU style choke balun). But at higher frequencies, I am concerned that the turn to turn capacitance might provide a low impedance path that parallels the choke. A string of beads does not have this problem. Not a valid point. Say we have 1000 ohms XL in parallel with 1000 ohms Xc at 10MHz. At 14 MHz we have 1400 ohms XL in parallel with 714 ohms Xc. The combined reactance is just over 1400 ohms. Capacitive reactance in parallel with inductive reactance increases the impedance, until we are over 1.414 times the resonant frequency. Anyplace below that, the shut C decrases unwanted coupling. If you look at actual chokes, you'll see that is a totally unfounded concern at HF. That toroid showing the flipped winding that is supposed to reduce stray C? It actually makes a choke work slightly worse...not bettter...until we get way up in VHF or UHF. I always try to not bend any cable to a smaller radius than the manufacturer recommends, and I am not familiar with this recommendation for common coax types used by amateurs. I would have to look that up before wrapping a core. Manufacturers are very conservative. I use RG400 in very tight coils without any issue, and my main baluns are all air core RG213, LMR400, or RG8X. I do some very tight radius bends without problems. My 160 vertical array uses a phase inverting transformer made with RG-400, and it is two parallel 3" tall stacks of 61 material 2" OD cores wound as tight as possible with RG-303. It handles huge voltage across the winding without any issues. The only part of the cable that significantly increases CM impedance is the part inside the core window. Why care how tightly the cable is pulled against the core outside?? The weight of the cable will tighten the turns on the core. Simple to fix. Don't hang anything from the cable leaving the core. I have over 300 feet of RG8X hanging vertically from a high dipole, but I have a rope lacing the cable as a strain relief. Been up since 1999. 73 Tom |
#56
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#57
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In article ,
Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: So any core you put over the coax doesn't see or interact with the common mode current or its fields at all, and you can completely ignore it when analyzing balun action. Roy probably meant "differential" above instead of "common". Cores on coax definitely "interact with the common mode current or its fields" and that is their purpose. ok so after reading all this, wich i enjoyed, confused me a bit. lets say i operate 10-160m and 6m (all band antenna) , at max 500wout. (typically 200w) who makes a good commercial choke balun"" w/so239's at the ends?? make/model/where to buy, ?? i've been using a w2du, lots have told me it's not the 'best' money isn't the issue i'd just like to get a 'good one' ie efficient thanks any tips appreciated |
#58
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ml wrote:
In article , Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: So any core you put over the coax doesn't see or interact with the common mode current or its fields at all, and you can completely ignore it when analyzing balun action. Roy probably meant "differential" above instead of "common". Cores on coax definitely "interact with the common mode current or its fields" and that is their purpose. Indeed I did. I apologize for the error. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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