Coil winding novice

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Coil winding novice

Nick G3RWF
I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding - never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the instruction manual. Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
73 Nick G3RWF
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Re: Coil winding novice

Tom McCulloch
Hi Nick,

  Gud luck with your K2...winding the coils is tedious but not difficult (in my opinion. Get yourself a good maginfying glass and recount the turns after you are finished.  Allow yourself an a bit more length then when you cut the wire, you can also trim it later, you'll have plenty of wire to spare.

  Building the rig yourself is a very satisfying process and this is part of it.  If you are not happy with what you have done, you can always purchase the pre-wound coils later...but I think you'll be fine.  

  One word of advice that I keep giving myself is that "this is a hobby" so have fun.

Let us know what happens.

Tom
WB2QDG
K2 1103

 -------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Nick Henwood" <[hidden email]>

> I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding - never  
> having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself rather than
> give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the instruction manual.
> Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
> 73 Nick G3RWF
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
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>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
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Re: Coil winding novice

Jeff Kinzli
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
Hi Nick,

I'm a beginner kit builder also, and just finished my first K2.

I, too, was worried about the toroid windings. I went ahead and tried
it, and it really isn't that bad.

I found that Elecraft gives you more than enough wire, so err on the
side of a longer wire than called for by an inch or two. I also highly
recommend making sure the leads are well tinned before installing -
this caused my no TX problem that took me a good few days to find. I
found that even though I had continuity between the solder pads, it
wasn't fully working. Pulling it out and reinstalling fixed the
problem.

Also, the number of passed *through* the toroid is the number of
windings. That's sometimes a bit confusing.

Good luck!

Jeff

On 2/9/07, Nick Henwood <[hidden email]> wrote:

> I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding - never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the instruction manual. Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
> 73 Nick G3RWF
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
>  http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
> Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com
>
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Re: Coil winding novice

Ian Stirling, G4ICV, AB2GR
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
On Friday 09 February 2007 13:07, Nick Henwood wrote:

>  Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.

Nick,

  I wound my own a year and a half ago.
 The diagrams in the manual are very clear in showing
the direction of the windings. Follow them exactly as
in the diagrams.  If the wire exits from the top on
the left and underneath on the right, make sure yours
does. If it's inverted, turning the toroid over won't
fix it - it's still wound incorrectly.

  I wound all my toroids in one evening while sitting
with my wife watching the television, looking ahead in
the manual to find them, labelling them with a piece
of clear adhesive tape on the end of a lead. I really
appreciated the continuity of building without having
to wind a toroid when it was ready to be soldered in.

Ian, G4ICV, AB2GR, K2 #4962, LP-100 #278
--
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Re: Coil winding novice

Randy Rathbun NV0U
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

Nick, you have NOTHING to worry about. Coils are simple. Yes, they  
can be time consuming when you get something with a bunch of winds on  
it, but it is not hard at all. It just requires some concentration  
("did I just put wind 29 or 30 on? Shoot! time to count again!"). The  
only thing you really need to watch when winding is that you don't  
get the wire under a previous turn. Again, this is not really a  
problem on up to about 15 turns, but going over that you have to look  
closer.

Don't let anybody scare you into thinking coil winding is hard. I  
find it one of the most fun parts of kit building.

On Feb 9, 2007, at 12:07 PM, Nick Henwood wrote:

> I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil  
> winding - never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to  
> wind them myself rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks  
> straightforward in the instruction manual. Would welcome  
> encouragement or cautionary advice.
> 73 Nick G3RWF
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
>  http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
> Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com

Randy Rathbun NV0U
[hidden email]
K2 #1981 KX1#1318
QRPARCI #10776, ARS #895, FPQRP #1292, KCQRP #1


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Re: Coil winding novice

Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy-2
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
Nothing ventured nothing gained Nick, give it a shot!!

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD


----- Original Message -----
From: "Nick Henwood" <[hidden email]>
To: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Friday, February 09, 2007 6:07 PM
Subject: [Elecraft] Coil winding novice


I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding -
never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself
rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the
instruction manual. Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
73 Nick G3RWF




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RE: Coil winding novice

Gregg R. Lengling
The biggest thing is stripping and tinning the leads.  I have a De-soldering
station that works very well to run the leads into the hole and strip with
heat and solder.  But you can carefully scrape the enamel off or use a very
fine grit sandpaper to strip them and then tin them very well and look for
the very thin coat of solder that tinning does.  This is probably the most
important part of the build.  Always double check them before installing
with an ohm meter to make sure you really have them tinned and there is no
resistance.  Once installed and soldered, carefully inspect the joints with
a magnify lens to make sure you have a very nice clean joint, if the wire is
sticking thru and isn't looking very soldered...it's not and may work now
but will fail later.  Once this is done, check it again with an ohm meter to
make sure everything has continuity.

Just a little patience and double checking and you'll be fine.

Gregg, W9DHI


----- Original Message -----
From: "Nick Henwood" <[hidden email]>
To: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Friday, February 09, 2007 6:07 PM
Subject: [Elecraft] Coil winding novice


I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding -
never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself
rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the
instruction manual. Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
73 Nick G3RWF






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RE: Coil winding novice

Don Wilhelm-3
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
Nick,

I do not understand why folks have a mental block about winding toroids - it
is easy for folks with normal manual dexterity.

A couple hints about winding - count each turn as it passes through the
center of the core - a single wire through the center is 1 turn.  For large
lengths of wire, start in the middle of the wire, wind half the turns, flip
it over and wind the remaining turns.
You 'push' the wire through the center of the toroid when it exits most of
the way, give it a small tug to form the wire on the inside of the core,
then bend the wire around the outside of the core forming it against the
core with a finger as you go around the outside (this is the step that makes
the toroids look neat and tidy).  Once you have formed the wire around the
outside, it is time to start over on the next turn.

Don't worry if you cannot make the first two turns look neat - when you have
the correct number of turns, remove those first two if they look messy and
wind two more on the other end.

What is important is the correct number of turns and the turns spacing -
space the turns to look as close to the manual diagrams as possible.
Toroids will work fine even if their appearance is not the greatest.

The most essential part about toroids is not in the winding, but in
stripping and tinning the wire leads.  Unless otherwise instructed, tin the
leads right up to the core body.  The wire used in the Elecraft kits is heat
strippable, no mechanical stripping is required, and is discouraged because
it often nicks the copper and the lead will eventually break.  The
solder-blob method described in the manual works great, just use a hot
soldering iron (800 degrees is good) and use a tip wide enough to hold a
reasonable blob of solder - use a 1/4 inch chisel tip if you have one, but
1/8 or 3/16 inch chisel tip will work if you add a little patience.  Hold
the wire in the solder blob until the enamel begins to blister and smoke,
then slowly draw the wire through the solder to tin the entire lead.

That is about all there is to it - a couple practice toroids may be needed,
but after that you could be an 'old hand' and wonder what all the anxiety is
about too.  Winding toroids may not be 'fun' for everyone, but it is not
difficult to do a good job.

73,
Don W3FPR

> -----Original Message-----
>
> I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil
> winding - never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is
> to wind them myself rather than give way and buy a set. It all
> looks straightforward in the instruction manual. Would welcome
> encouragement or cautionary advice.
> 73 Nick G3RWF
>
--
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Re: Coil winding novice

John Lonigro
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
Nick:
One problem I had winding coils was the first turn always was looser
than the rest.  So I would intentionally wind an additional turn and
then remove the first turn.  Just make sure you end up with the correct
number of turns.

Also, after the coil is wound, before I try to strip the insulation from
the ends, I do a fit check and trim the wires so they are only perhaps
1/8" longer than need be.  I then remove the coil and know exactly where
I need to remove the insulation.  If  you don't do that, you will end up
spending lots of time stripping insulation from parts of the wire you
are going to trim off anyway.  Once you think you've stripped off the
insulation, do a resistance check before installing the coil.  After you
install it, other components in the circuit might lead you to believe
all is well when it isn't.

Good luck.  If you are careful, you should have no problems.

73's,

John AA0VE

Nick Henwood wrote:
> I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding - never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the instruction manual. Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
> 73 Nick G3RWF
>
>  
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Re: Coil winding novice

Jim K4ZMV
In reply to this post by Nick G3RWF
Hello, Nick.

I say wind them yourself.  I faced the same dilemma.  The first one or two
may seem awkward, but you will be more proud of your accomplishment when you
hear the first signals.  Pay attention to which way you start the winding.
You can get that from the manual and the pictures.  Good luck and watch the
soldering.

73,

Jim, K4ZMV


----- Original Message -----
From: "Nick Henwood" <[hidden email]>
To: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Friday, February 09, 2007 1:07 PM
Subject: [Elecraft] Coil winding novice


I am just starting on my K2 and feeling apprehensive about coil winding -
never  having wound a toroidal coil.My inclination is to wind them myself
rather than give way and buy a set. It all looks straightforward in the
instruction manual. Would welcome encouragement or cautionary advice.
73 Nick G3RWF
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