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From: "Henry Kolesnik" on Thurs,Apr 7 2005 10:15 pm
Get a nice piece of smooth round rod and tightly wind a little over a lineal inch of wire closely spaced as possible. Count the turns in one inch and divide the number of turns into one inch and you'll have a very good measurement without any cost. 73 Hank WD5JFR Albert wrote in message ... Does anyone know how to measure or determine the wire size. I have tons of motors, solenoids, and similar items. I need some #24 wire and some #30 for a coil, but have to be sure regarding the wire diameter as it's a critical ap and the author of the article says 'don't substitute'. I know I can weigh it, provided it's not on a spool or motor winding already. My local electrical shop has a wire gauge, but it stops at 18 gauge. A microscope might work, but ones that have calibrated distance measuring on the eyepiece are expensive. Perhaps a milliohm meter might be able to measure the difference in resistance of a foot of it or so, but that's hardly a standard item either. Any suggestions? A non-destructive measurement is best. Along about 1946 my middle school (we called it "junior high" back then) electric shop instructor demonstrated how to use a mechanical caliper and how NOT to squeeze too hard in doing so. Soft-drawn copper common to wire is fairly easy to squash when using a caliper. Using one requires a VERY light touch on the wire, just enough to be able to pull it slightly through the caliper jaws. Even so, pulling on soft-drawn copper wire is going to distort it slightly so the measurement is going to be on the small side. Snipping off ten or twenty short lengths, then measuring the total width and dividing by the number of lengths will be a bit better in accuracy. A pocket optical comparator is handy for this and other uses, especially when trying to get a measurement on something already mounted with epoxy, varnish, etc. as in windings of electric motors. While the "100-foot resistance test" is a practical idea with a roll of wire, it is hard to do when the wire comes from a motor or transformer giving its all to the project. As a practical matter, the wire size in small (such as HF range) coils won't matter much on either the inductance or Q tolerance. For example, Dropping from 30 AWG to 32 AWG isn't going to be a disaster in cylindrical ("solenoidal") or toroidal forms. The change in inductance will be aligned-out on trimming in the circuit itself. Q is going to change much more depending on the material of the coil former and the presence of nearby conductive objects such as shields. If a Twenty is too much for a pound or so of new wire stock, then nobody can afford a Q Meter or inductance meter to do an accurate measurement. Get with some friends/acquaintences and share the cost of new stock. Just some practical thoughts after doing a bit of winding in my time... |
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