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Tim Shoppa wrote: In the real world, most non-miniature variable capacitors were made with spacers and plates that weren't soldered all together, and generally didn't use star washers or anything except at the connecting posts. But these are generally either all-brass, all-aluminum, all- steel, etc., and not a mismash of different materials. You don't explicitly say so, Dave, but are you implying that it's the dissimilar materials that are the problem, or that it's the use of aluminum? It's a combination of both, I think. A cap of this sort would work quite nicely indeed if it were made out of aluminum, and welded together. I believe that such capacitors are available even today (perhaps on special order). Aluminum's conductivity is certainly high enough, and the thin layer of aluminum oxide on the surface would have no effect on the cap's usability. The biggest problem with a hybrid aluminum/brass capacitor is that it's hard to get a reliable, low-resistance bond between the two metals. It's certainly not impossible - there are some fluxes and solders which can bond to aluminum - but it's not necessarily easy for the hobbyist to make this work reliably. Non-welded aluminum air-variable capacitors seem to work find in most applications... but in most applications, the currents flowing through the cap are relatively low, the circuit impedances are relatively high, and thus the resistive losses in the plate/spacer connections are negligible. In magloop transmitting antennas, the radiation resistance is small (often just a fraction of an ohm) and the resistive losses in the tuning capacitor can significantly effect the efficiency of the antenna. My personal taste would be to make it out of all-brass. After the 50's, for the miniature variable capacitors, they seem to be made out of material that has been silver-soldered together without any explicit spacer components. (Maybe brazed or spot-welded, in some cases.) This seems to be either an improvement made for VHF/UHF work (remember when 50MHz was UHF?) or an admission that using spacers doesn't make economic sense when components are so tiny. The highest-quality seem to use silver-plated brass, soldered or welded together. This would assure a good electrical connection, and I believe that this combination of materials and methods also helps reduce the tendency of the capacitor to drift in value as a result of temperature changes, or exhibit microphonic effects. People who build low-drift VFOs seem to favor this style of air-variable capacitor. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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