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[email protected] April 3rd 08 05:42 AM

Inductors in nH
 
Hi all,
I am student of engineering. I require inductors in nH range. But
m not able to find it out. Please tell me any site or place so that i
can get that in one or two days. Or if u hav any methode of makin
inductors please tell me.

K7ITM April 3rd 08 07:52 AM

Inductors in nH
 
On Apr 2, 9:42 pm, wrote:
Hi all,
I am student of engineering. I require inductors in nH range. But
m not able to find it out. Please tell me any site or place so that i
can get that in one or two days. Or if u hav any methode of makin
inductors please tell me.


It is not difficult to wind your own inductors. Values up to at least
a few hundred nanohenries may be made by winding copper wire around
the threads of a machine screw, and unscrewing the screw, leaving a
self-supporting coil. You have to be reasonably careful with such a
coil, but it's a practical way to wind small coils. For higher values
that require wire that's too fine to be self-supporting that way, you
can wind the coil on a ceramic or plastic form. PVC pipe isn't the
best RF insulator, but even it makes a decent coil form, and it's very
cheap and readily available in various sizes. You can find small
polystryene tubing at hobby stores, and it works well for a coil form,
too. The type they sell isn't high quality RF grade stock, but again,
it generally works well for coil forms. You can probably find other
plastic cylinders around your school that will work as coil forms.
You can even make your own by rolling up paper.

A good web site for calculating the inductance of a cylindrical helix
is http://hamwaves.com/antennas/inductance.html. There's an
inductance calculator for cylindrical helix coils and toroid coils in
the RFSim99 package which you should be able to find for free
download. It may well be useful to you for other things, too.

I assume these coils are for use at RF frequencies, probably a few MHz
or above, so winding them with solid wire is appropriate. Air-core
coils will have the best Q if you wind them with a little space
between the turns--pitch of the turns about 1.5 to 2 times the wire
diameter is usually good.

In the US, you can order inductors from DigiKey or Mouser and get them
quickly if you live close to where they are shipped from, or if you
pay extra for fast delivery.

Cheers,
Tom

Highland Ham April 3rd 08 12:12 PM

Inductors in nH
 
K7ITM wrote:

A good web site for calculating the inductance of a cylindrical helix
is http://hamwaves.com/antennas/inductance.html. There's an
inductance calculator for cylindrical helix coils and toroid coils in
the RFSim99 package which you should be able to find for free
download. It may well be useful to you for other things, too.

======================
Tnx Tom for the above 'excellent' comprehensive web site reference.

Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH

AF6AY April 3rd 08 05:40 PM

Inductors in nH
 
wrote on Wed, Apr 2 2008 9:42 pm:

Hi all,
I am student of engineering. I require inductors in nH range. But
m not able to find it out. Please tell me any site or place so that i
can get that in one or two days. Or if u hav any methode of makin
inductors please tell me.


Try Ham Radio Magazine for July 1977 and the article "Self-Supporting
Coils" by Leonard H. Anderson.

I will send a PDF copy to you by private e-mail as an attachment.

Please note that WIRE LEADS to coils in the nanoHenry range will have
appreciable inductance by themselves and will affect any inductance
calculations you do.

73, Len AF6AY



terry April 12th 08 01:44 AM

Inductors in nH
 
On Apr 3, 9:12*am, Highland Ham
wrote:
K7ITM wrote:
A good web site for calculating the inductance of a cylindrical helix
ishttp://hamwaves.com/antennas/inductance.html. *There's an
inductance calculator for cylindrical helix coils and toroid coils in
the RFSim99 package which you should be able to find for free
download. *It may well be useful to you for other things, too.


======================
Tnx Tom for the above 'excellent' comprehensive web site reference.

Frank *GM0CSZ / KN6WH


Toilet paper cores; kitchen paper towel cores etc.
Wooden dowel rods.
Even cardboard boxes or a plastic bottle or container.


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