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From: Bill Powell on Feb 5, 12:41 pm
I'm seeking information about using 2 or more closely spaced SM inductors (unshielded - not torid or shielded) in a bandpass circuit. The application I'm thinking of would use two closely spaced SM inductors and varicaps to tune both the center frequency and bandpass and allow simple and repeatable construction without the need to locate and wind torids or find specialty inductors. Please - experiences and not pure speculation. Experience with filters here indicates that EVERY filter design BEGINS with speculation. :-) Bandpass filters can be designed for specific bandpass without using inductive coupling. Those with percentage bandwidths less than 5% can be tuned around the bandcenter without much change in bandwidth. What bandcenter and bandwidth were you considering? From a scan of several different manufacturers of SMD inductors, they don't specify any coupling so it would be experiment time to find it out as one has already observed in here. I've found that trying to determine coefficient of coupling by experiment is more difficult than designing and tweaking a non-coupling filter. Mileage varies. If you want a small program that does passive (non-inductive coupling) L-C filters (low, high, band, reject) synthesis and analysis (with ability to set individual component values and simulate Q), ask me in e-mail for LCie4. Ain't flashy but it works. Freeware. Small-quantity toroid forms are available at reasonable prices quickly from www.kitsandparts.com. For home use, I like Neil Hecht's (www.aade.com) little L-C Meter for much-easier zeroing-in on inductance values when winding toroids along with checking out fixed, small-value capacitors. |
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