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#1
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Thanks Bill.
The autopilot service manual I have shows a hand drawn figure of the cable that indicates a curly or spiral twist to the center conductor which appears as you stated to help keep the center conductor in the middle of the tube. It also mentions that the characteristics and length of the cable is part of the tuned circuit, but doesn't give any data on the cable. Like you, I'm sure I've seen that type of cable somewhere in the past and thought it was in an automotive antenna application, but it could have been elsewhere. Ronnie "- exray -" wrote in message ... Michael A. Terrell wrote: It was RG62 93 ohm coax. Certainly not in older radios. I don't know what they sell nowadays. I've seen that 'spiral' type of cable. They basically used the spiral as a means of maintaining the centre conductor in the average 'middle' of the hollow dielectric. The combined inductance and capacitance of the old cable was somewhat critical but the older radios provided an antenna trimmer to compensate for the variations. The electrical model was essentially a "voltage probe" and doesn't necessarily follow common antenna/feedline rules and thought. -Bill |
#2
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Nope. That's where. Autos. A piece of spiral plastic "rod" around the
solid wire center conductor to space it in the center of the over-sized-hole dielectric. I thought it was also a "Motorola" connector, but didn't want to sound arrogant (still working at the circle M Ranch, you know). The AM receiver antenna was (is) nothing more that a capacitive probe hooked to the input, so the smaller the loading cap the better. Gee, if I shill have some around, perhaps some experimentation to determine the Z0 ... OK ... project 9,735, on the list for retirement. (yea, right) 73, Steve, K9DCI I only saw it referred to as low capacitance cable. Don't know if the Z0 was specified "Ronnie" wrote in message . com... Thanks Bill. The autopilot service manual I have shows a hand drawn figure of the cable that indicates a curly or spiral twist to the center conductor which appears as you stated to help keep the center conductor in the middle of the tube. It also mentions that the characteristics and length of the cable is part of the tuned circuit, but doesn't give any data on the cable. Like you, I'm sure I've seen that type of cable somewhere in the past and thought it was in an automotive antenna application, but it could have been elsewhere. Ronnie "- exray -" wrote in message ... Michael A. Terrell wrote: It was RG62 93 ohm coax. Certainly not in older radios. I don't know what they sell nowadays. I've seen that 'spiral' type of cable. They basically used the spiral as a means of maintaining the centre conductor in the average 'middle' of the hollow dielectric. The combined inductance and capacitance of the old cable was somewhat critical but the older radios provided an antenna trimmer to compensate for the variations. The electrical model was essentially a "voltage probe" and doesn't necessarily follow common antenna/feedline rules and thought. -Bill |
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