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Henry Kiefer wrote:
. . . If you talk about explosion: What is the power level you mean? Currently I have a ferrite rod of 9mm diameter and 50mm length, driven by 40mA against 2Vpp. Do you think it is impossible to pump maybe 5watts into the rod? Dunno. If it had to dissipate most of the 5 watts (which is likely), it would get as hot as a resistor that size dissipating the same power, and that would be pretty hot. Just how hot depends on how well insulated it is, how good the air flow is around it, and how much heat is conducted away through the wires or any other physical connection. The first thing I'd check would be the Curie temperature of the ferrite. If you reach that temperature, the material will lose its magnetic properties, so the antenna impedance will abruptly and dramatically change. At some higher temperature, the ferrite will fracture, maybe violently. If that gets to be a problem, a lower loss ferrite might be necessary. That usually means lower initial permeability, and probably a lower Q inductor. You'll have to determine what the optimum trade would be. Shouldn't be any trick to feed some power to one and watch its temperature with a thermocouple. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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