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James M. Potter wrote:
There are two things to keep in mind when you put a coil in a can. 1. The inductance will decrease due to the reduced voulme for the magnetic energy. This is the same effect as using a brass slug to change teh inductance of a coil for VHF applications. 2. The losses will increase due to the induced currents in the walls of the container. What happens is that the metal acts as a shorted turn which absorbs some of the current flowing in the inductor. A brass slug core inside the coil takes advantage of this, the closer to the center of the coil the greater the effect. The result is both a lowering of the inductance and probably the Q. An effective way to tune vhf-uhf circuits, but a shorted rotary turn was also used on the hf bands in "olden" days. In the case of small tightly wound inductors with iron core slugs the coupling from the shield can to the coil is rather small (ratio of the turns and inductance) so the effect is small. The further away the walls are the lower the effect. The various rules of thumb you hear are just the result of someone determining what is acceptable. 73 de K9GXC, Jim On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 13:45:47 GMT, "Ceriel Nosforit" wrote: Quick, simple question: Would a normal aluminum can be any good for RF shielding of a balun, or would it for some reason not work? Should I connect it to ground? And; What does a transmatch do for me that a normal balun/transformer won't do for me? Thank you for your time. Sincerecly, |
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