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Tim Wescott mentions: wrote: Jamie wrote: I've tried to use one of those things from the back of a monitor (presumably to prevent RF interference) as one of the coils and another adjustable coil from another device, to no avail. It has no markings and it appears to be a ferrite device in the shape of a ring. Anyone know an easy way to figure out how many turns to get (presumably 300mh?) from one of these? Can I measure it with a ruler and some how get a formula for the number of turns / mH ? Are these really bad deviced to use? (the thought occurs I must admit, that if it was meant to BLOCK rf, using would be illogical) Yes, I would expect they would be really bad ! If you knew the permeability of the material used then measuring with a ruler and applying some math (I don't know the formulas) would in theory get you an iductance calculation. But the materials used for these EMI chokes generally has too high a permeability to make inductors with convenient numbers of turns for the HF bands, and generally is quite lossy so the resulting inductors will have low Q. It is extremely unlikely to work. Since you don't want to buy any parts, I would recommend once you figure out the required inductance from the Amidon formulas, just wind air core coils (well, some sort of low loss former like a piece of plastic tubing is probably needed) with the same inductance. Inductance formulas for air core coils are available everywhere in handbooks and on the web. You might have to play with the number of turns in the feedback link though, as the coupling between it and the main coil will not be as tight in an air core coil as in the toroid. I would start with the same ratio of turns or maybe add a bit to the feedback coil. 73, Steve VE3SMA If it's a broadcast band radio a toilet paper tube will work well. If ham band then something smaller like a sample-size shampoo bottle. Does it count as garbage if you buy the stuff so you'll have the 'garbage' when you're done? LOL! I was sooo tempted to buy 0.05 resistors after burning my fingers trying to extract them from a modem.. :-) I read some place, it's better to use a larger diameter coil if at all possible, but the formulas I've run across for calculating uH (I always get my milli's and micros confused!) seem to indicate in either case, I'd need the same amount of wire. Lots of things puzzle me about this, for example in this circuit: http://www.tricountyi.net/~randerse/regen.htm I don't see a "grid leak" the way I had used in the tube model. While this circuit: http://www.electronics-tutorials.com...o-receiver.htm Seems to have one feeding the gate of the FET. (never was real clear on what it did exactly) (I can't use the latter circuit as it has more parts and I don't want to introduce a 3rd variable cap.) Jamie -- http://www.geniegate.com Custom web programming (rot13) User Management Solutions |
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