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I've constructed a choke balun from a big toroidal core I had lying
around, abt 3.5 inch O.D., 2 inch ID, unknown material, measures about 125 ohms pure inductive at 7 MHz with 3 turns on it, so I figured that 10 or 12 turns would be an effective 7MHz choke*. The coax is RG-55 double shielded RG-58 size, solid center conductor, solid polyethylene dielectric. I wound the coax pretty tightly for neatness; each turn is probably only 1 inch inner diameter. Is this too tight? With a 47 ohm resistor in series with the output wires (I figure about 0.05 microhenries there, it's a few inches of wire), I get what I think are more or less expected results right now. I've been playing with one of Reg's programs to see if the impedance at the input side of the balun jives with the termination, and I think it does, but I can't just go up up up in frequency with the MFJ-259 to see if I've affected the *cable* impedance unless I cut off my weather sealed, heat shrinked, and Anderson Powerpoled coil tap wires and put on a BNC and terminator. So I wonder about the longevity of the thing. How tight do you coil your toroidal choke baluns? *Another question, figured I'd put it at the end. What's the impedance/length of the 43 material core that fits over RG-58 down at 7-10MHz. Amidon and Fair-Rite sites have some spot measurements higher up that I've found, but I'm not turning up charts for all of HF. I know 43 material is not used so much for low-power HF choke baluns because of reduced per-bead impedance, but I got a big box of them for free, so it's just stringing effort on my part to make a bead choke for 40m. 73, Dan N3OX |
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