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Thanks, Roy,
and multiturn conductive plastic/cermet pots still have the same flat element, say , 340 degree, but incude a vernier dial that changes turns ratio? Thks "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... Ivan Makarov wrote: Hi, All, can anybody tell if conductive plastic pots are non-inductive and can be used for HF/50MHz ? Same question re cermet pots. The short answer is yes, but the long answer, as always, is more involved. Nothing is truly non-inductive -- even a short straight piece of wire has inductance. But the inductance of a conductive plastic or cermet pot is only due to the physical length of the element. That is, it's as small as it can possibly be for the physical size of the pot. That's in contrast to a wire-wound pot which has many turns and a correspondingly much higher inductance. Whether you can use them at a given frequency depends on the particular application. If you can tolerate a wire at that point in the circuit which is the length of the pot's element (plus the distance to the external connections), then you can tolerate the pot. Otherwise, you might or might not be able to use the pot, depending on the relationship between the inductance and resistance. Because the element length is shorter, physically smaller pots have less inductance than larger ones. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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