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In addition to what others have said, the most field you can
generate with the ferrite rod antenna will occur when it is almost reaching saturation, and that takes a lot of ampere turns. You can deliver more ampere turns to the rod than your transmitter output can deliver if you resonate the coil with a capacitor. That way, you have the current bouncing back and forth through the capacitor added to the current from the amplifier. If the coil-capacitor Q is, say, 100, there will be 100 times more current through the coil than the transmitter is delivering. This will probably take a coil with a considerable mass of copper in it. John, that is what I have seen! I resonated the antenna coil and driven it with it's resonance frequency. Seems that the achievable distance was a little more than the circuit without resonating capacitor. You say, that driving the ferrite rod into saturation will force it to leave more power into air? Why? - Henry |
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