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On Sep 27, 10:28*pm, K7ITM wrote:
On Sep 26, 8:25*pm, brian whatcott wrote: rtfm wrote: On 2009-09-24, Tomylavitesse wrote: HI, Often I can see coils where some turns are shorted in order to modify there value. I wonder whether these shorted turns would not be seen as a short cicuit and could decrease the quality of that coil. How can I have an idea of the lost of quality without complex equipment ? I plan to build this kind of coil for a shortened antenna... The circuit to shorten turns in such environments has to be very low loss. Otherwise you will have lots of power lost in this short circiuted parts of the coil. And in PA / antenna environments you always have power. This is why switches are always "heavy duty" in PA and antenna switching units. If you do so, the current in this shortened turns is a complex current. And as you know, complex currents do not consume power. Only the real parts of current do. This is totally different from the situation e.g. in a power transformator. If you would shorten turns there, you would have power loss, because the resistant of the turns in power transformators has a much higher real part compared with rf coils in PA / antenna units. OK? This seemed like an insightful response - but not one with universal appeal. Let me try embroidering on this theme a little more.... The leakage path for current in an insulated wire is strikingly different from the leakage path in a magnetic conductor - usually called a core or stamping. The leakage resistance can easily be 1000 megohms compared to the conductor's resistance of (say) 1 ohm. A ratio of a billion to one. The leakage path for cores and stampings is lucky to be a thousand times more "resistive" than the path through the core - if it's an iron stamping, an iron dust core, or a ferrite core. A ratio of a thousand to one. For air cored coils, the leakage path is lower still, so that the magnetic path does not couple all turns together at the best of times. If an end turn or two is shorted, the reactive current in the shorted turn pinches off most of the magnetic coupling from the remaining coil altogether, so the effect is not as dramatic as we might expect. Waddaya think of that? Brian W It's actually not too difficult to come up with a reasonably accurate model that you can then analyze...for example, you can put it into Spice and look at the losses, the lowering of Q, etc. What I've done to build the model is to consider that the shorted turns are one coil and the remainder of the turns are another. *Before those turns are shorted, each of those two coils (that happen to form one coil) has a self-inductance, and when they are put end-to-end to form the one coil, they then also have mutual inductance. *You can use your favorite coil inductance calculator to find the inductance of each of the two individual coils, and the net single coil composed of those two. *Those three inductances let you calculate the mutual inductance (or the coupling coefficient), and that's the core of the model. *You can add in the RF resistance of each coil: *there are various ways to get a good estimate of the Qu, and from that you can get the RF resistance at the operating frequency. If this is too muddy, I could offer a specific example... Cheers, Tom So, just for fun I ran an analysis this way... I asked the Hamwaves on-line inductance calculator about three coils, all 2.5mm wire, 5mm pitch, 75mm mean coil diameter, default copper wire. You can put effective shunt capacitances into the model too, but I didn't in this case. The test frequency is 10.0MHz. These are the "lumped equivalent" values. L1: 13 turns 65mm long -- 9.272uH, 0.491 ohms, Qu=1187 L2: 17 turns 85mm long -- 13.191uH, 0.646 ohms, Qu=1283 L3 (L1 and L2 end to end): 30t, 150mm -- 26.600uH, 0.880 ohms, Qu=1899 (My impression is that the RF resistance and Qu calculation yields Qu that's a bit too high, but that's what the calculator says...) From these, I calculate the mutual inductance. L1+L2+2*M = L3, so M=2.0685uH. Coupling coefficient equals M/sqrt(L1*L2), or 0.187. I put L1 and L2 and their respective RF resistances in series in Spice, with a resistance representing a shorting switch across L2. Note that this model, with the switch open, will give an RF resistance simply equal to the sum of the RF resistances of the two coils, which isn't the same as the Hamwaves calculator gives for L3. The results are kind of interesting. It doesn't take much shunt resistance in the switch to lower the Q (increase the net RF resistance). You want to be sure your switch is really OPEN when the coil isn't shorted. You can actually stand quite a bit of resistance (a good fraction of an ohm) when it's shorted without really bad effects. Here are the results I got, again at 10.0MHz: Effective net R(switch) L(net) series resistance ohms uH ohms Qu -------- -------- -------- -------- 1e9 26.598 1.138 1469 1e8 26.598 1.146 1458 1e7 26.598 1.229 1360 1e6 26.598 2.056 813 1e5 26.597 10.32 162 1e4 26.476 92.4 18.0 1e3 19.405 545 2.24 1e2 9.201 132.4 4.37 10 8.950 13.886 40.5 1.0 8.947 1.845 305 0.5 8.948 1.175 478 0.2 8.947 0.774 726 0.1 8.947 0.640 878 0.05 8.947 0.573 981 0.02 8.947 0.533 1054 0.01 8.947 0.520 1081 Cheers, Tom |
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