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![]() "Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message , dave writes Ralph Mowery wrote: "dave" wrote in message news:0vqdnaEyq4zYAhfXnZ2dnUVZ_hJi4p2d@earthlink. com... I need to lose about 5 dB from a 15 Watt exciter. Thanks. Simple answer is no. While you can build one with wirewound resistors , the normal formulars will not usually work at RF and you will have a lot of inductance to deal with. Even the socalled non-inductive resistors are only so at the audio frequencies. Can the inductive reactance be cancelled with capacitors? I'm mainly concerned with 40, 30 and 20 meters. If your highest frequency is only 14MHz, and you're not trying to obtain a sooper-dooper perfect match for your exciter, then I'd say that you would certainly get away with using wirewound resistors. To minimise the effects of the inductance, you could try mounting the resistors 'hard down' against a ground plane. You might need a sheet of some insulating material to avoid any danger of shorting to it. And presumably, to get rid of 5dB (nearly 3/4 of your original 15W) you intend to use paralleled-up resistors. This in itself will help minimise the inductance. -- Ian A bunch of chip resistors in parallel to ultimately make a T-atten. |
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