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I'm looking for ideas for sliding a ~2" ferrite core in and out of a
coil. I've seen ways of tuning over a small range by means of a brass screw used as core. I need smtg better than that, with repeatable positioning and smooth movement. Some ideas: - micrometric screw: use a preexisting screw taken from old depth gauge or bought standalone PRO calibrated, demoltiplicated, high resolution position readout CON expensive if new, still need to invent a way to fasten ferrite core to spindle, screw protudes. - screw drive from scratch: PRO can be taylored, can use knob with 360deg scale, turns determined by screw pitch - say 0-100 over 360deg @ 20 turns/inch produces 8,000 divisions over 2" linear displacement (if with vernier reaches 80,000), may use knob with turns counter CON quite complicated to design, may reguire machining and searching for pieces. - wire drive, like in old radios PRO can reuse hardware like in old radio, if scale is linear-motion the tuning indicator is directly attached to ferrite plunger CON may suffer backlash, hardware disappearing, very short scale. I only saw very rough solutions, such as gravity pulled ferrite in vertical coil, or using brass screw directly as core for small band coverage. No idea if there's some promising and available type of surplus drive. Any ideas? Any plans anywhere for DIY? Kits??? (again, I _did_ see use of a small brass screw w/o ferrite!). R & TIA Filippo N1JPR |
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