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![]() "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I haven't gone through this in detail yet, but one misconception is glaring: Yuri Blanarovich wrote: . . . I used 1/2" copper water tubing (non ferrous material passing the magnetic field) for circular loop about 4 foot diameter. . . If you believe that, it's no surprise that you're having difficulty understanding how a shielded loop works. It's not hard to demonstrate that the (time-varying) magnetic field doesn't penetrate a non-ferrous shield, if you believe (correctly) that a time-varying magnetic field will produce a current on a nearby conductor. Simply put an oscillator or signal source into a copper box -- you can solder one op out of PC board material. Run some wires all around the inside which carry the oscillator signal, putting them as close to the shield wall as you like. Put a battery inside the box to power the oscillator and seal the box up. Then sniff around the outside of the box with any kind of magnetic field detector you can devise. If you have a little potted oscillator of some kind, you should be able to do this in a couple of hours at most. That is called Faraday shield and does not function as Electrostatic shield. Or, just connect your rig to a good dummy load with some double shielded coax and sniff around the outside of the copper coax shield. If you put the detector just outside the shield, the current on the inside of the shield will be much closer to the detector than the current on the center conductor. So if the shield is transparent to a magnetic field, your detector should go wild. (Make sure the rig is very well shielded, though, so no common mode currents make their way from the rig to the outside of the shield.) Alternatively, if you'll spend some time with a good electromagnetics text learning about eddy currents and the like, you'll understand why you'd be wasting your time with those experiments. I learned about shieldings, Faradyas, I use them, in equipment design, in RF and harmonics suppression, I built shielded room for university. But I also know the difference between the Farady shield and Electrostatic shield and seen them work. Maybe lumping all shields is as no good as lumping all coils ain't no good? Once you're convinced that the shield blocks the magnetic as well as electric field, you'll have to revise your theory on how a shielded loop works. And you'll find that Tom's explanation is correct. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Roy, I have magnetothermia machine which is about 200 W push-pull power generator at around 27 MHz. It uses single turn, shielded loop, made of coax, about 30 inch in circumference. Loop wire, antenna (center conductor of coax) is fed from the plates of two tubes, shield is open at the far end and grounded at the exit from the enclosure. I get those 200 W heating my body tissue with magnetic field. Maybe it has something to do with shielding being a fraction of a wavelength distance from the radiator and the properties of the magnetic and electric components in the antenna reactive near field region? I know that this loop radiates along its circumference, not just from the gap in the shield. What's yer theory? Or it don't (ooops, can't) woyk? You seem to associate and stick to wrongos and I am sorry you find their explanations correct, for the reality proves them wrong. 73 Yuri Blanarovich, K3BU |
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