Toroid Balun Cores

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Toroid Balun Cores

N5GE
I'm refurbishing an old antenna here and the toroid in the matching balun is
cracked in several places.  Will that affect the toroid performance?

73,
Tom
Amateur Radio Operator N5GE
ARRL Lifetime Member
QCWA Lifetime Member
 

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Amateur Radio Operator N5GE
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Mike WA8BXN
Tom,
 
Are the cracks all the way through? If so, just as is I would think there
would be an effect. Assuming little material is missing, I think you
probably could carefully glue it back together, trying to get things as
tight as possible. If the cracks don't separate it into pieces, I might try
using super glue in the cracks to keep it together.
 
Perhaps a more important question is why did it crack, and what can you do
to prevent further cracking. If there was no obvious physical stress that
caused the cracks, it sounds like it could be defective material in the
first place and you might be better off replacing it if possible.
 
73 - Mike WA8BXN
 
 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: [hidden email]
Date: 10/15/2011 8:30:31 PM
To: Elecraft
Subject: [Elecraft] Toroid Balun Cores
 
I'm refurbishing an old antenna here and the toroid in the matching balun is

Cracked in several places. Will that affect the toroid performance?
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

N5GE
In reply to this post by N5GE

Thanks to all that answered.

I guessed it was toast.  It's an old (1998 vintage) Cushcraft X7.  I understand
that the older ones had problems with the balun's, which is why probably why it
quit working properly.

73,
Tom
Amateur Radio Operator N5GE
ARRL Lifetime Member
QCWA Lifetime Member


On Sat, 15 Oct 2011 19:29:57 -0500, [hidden email] wrote:

>I'm refurbishing an old antenna here and the toroid in the matching balun is
>cracked in several places.  Will that affect the toroid performance?
>
>73,
>Tom
>Amateur Radio Operator N5GE
>ARRL Lifetime Member
>QCWA Lifetime Member
>
>
>______________________________________________________________
>Elecraft mailing list
>Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
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>
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Jim Brown-10
In reply to this post by N5GE
On 10/15/2011 5:29 PM, [hidden email] wrote:
> I'm refurbishing an old antenna here and the toroid in the matching balun is
> cracked in several places.  Will that affect the toroid performance?

Yep. It's toast.

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Jim Brown-10
In reply to this post by N5GE
On 10/15/2011 8:14 PM, Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
> Back in the dark ages we had air core baluns. They were HUGE - an HF balun
> might take up a couple of cubic feet of space - but they were impervious to
> such failures since air doesn't saturate or crack, Hi!

They also didn't do much except make us feel better. Ferrite core chokes
actually DO something useful.  The cracked balun was poorly designed, so
it overheated.  That's a DESIGN mistake, not a "defect" of ferrite cores.

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

gm3sek
Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
>>
>>They also didn't do much except make us feel better. Ferrite core chokes
>>actually DO something useful.  The cracked balun was poorly designed, so
>>it overheated.  That's a DESIGN mistake, not a "defect" of ferrite cores.
>>
>>73, Jim K9YC
>>

>Why would you think that?  Properly designed, an air core balun and a
>ferrite core balun are electrically identical.
>

That simply isn't true. Air-cored chokes are reactive in impedance,
narrowband and easily detuned. A properly designed ferrite core choke is
predominantly resistive and broadband, which makes it a much more
dependable solution.

Steve Hunt G3TXQ has measured a wide range of different chokes and
plotted the results on a graphic that shows this point very clearly.

<http://www.karinya.net/g3txq/chokes/>

In Steve's graphic, an effective choke needs the largest possible
bandwidth of dark green, preferably with the black underline denoting
predominantly resistive impedance. This can only be achieved with the
help of ferrite - and even then, only with the right ferrite core and
the right kind of winding.

Air-cored chokes are shown to be relatively ineffective, narrowband
devices... and then there's worse. Steve has also shown that the series
reactances of the feedline and the wrong kind of air-cored choke can
sometimes cancel, leading to a higher level of common mode current than
before. This cannot happen with a ferrite choke that is predominantly
resistive.

For further information read Steve's page followed perhaps by my own
article, at:

<http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek/in-prac/index.htm#1005>

That in turn will lead you on to K9YC's much longer papers. Steve, Jim
and I have different styles of presentation but we're absolutely agreed
on the one key point: an air-core choke and a ferrite-core choke are
very different indeed.



--

73 from Ian GM3SEK
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

John Ragle
An interesting discussion...much is usually made of the "self-shielding"
property of ferrite toroids, and we see this in practice in interstage
transformers as well as in "baluns [sic]". (I am talking here about the
"balun" type also called a "choke balun.")

However, it is also a fact that the magnetic field outside a cylindrical
solenoid tends to zero as the solenoid tends to "infinite" length. So,
for example a choke balun wound on a cylindrical form rather than as a
clump of scramble-wound turns is also more or less self-shielding.

Parenthetically, it is this self-shielding nature of solenoids that
plays an important role in experimental verification of the Ahranov-Bohm
effect (see recent QEX  article by Robert Zimmerman and Feynman Lectures
Vol. II Chapter 15, sections 15.4 and 15.5).

I agree with the contributor(s) who said that the cracked toroid is
basically junk. It has lost its utility because the magnetic circuit is
broken at the crack. It is unlikely that superglue will restore it.

John Ragle -- W1ZI

=====

On 10/16/2011 4:41 PM, Ian White GM3SEK wrote:

> Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
>>> They also didn't do much except make us feel better. Ferrite core chokes
>>> actually DO something useful.  The cracked balun was poorly designed, so
>>> it overheated.  That's a DESIGN mistake, not a "defect" of ferrite cores.
>>>
>>> 73, Jim K9YC
>>>
>> Why would you think that?  Properly designed, an air core balun and a
>> ferrite core balun are electrically identical.
>>
> That simply isn't true. Air-cored chokes are reactive in impedance,
> narrowband and easily detuned. A properly designed ferrite core choke is
> predominantly resistive and broadband, which makes it a much more
> dependable solution.
>
> Steve Hunt G3TXQ has measured a wide range of different chokes and
> plotted the results on a graphic that shows this point very clearly.
>
> <http://www.karinya.net/g3txq/chokes/>
>
> In Steve's graphic, an effective choke needs the largest possible
> bandwidth of dark green, preferably with the black underline denoting
> predominantly resistive impedance. This can only be achieved with the
> help of ferrite - and even then, only with the right ferrite core and
> the right kind of winding.
>
> Air-cored chokes are shown to be relatively ineffective, narrowband
> devices... and then there's worse. Steve has also shown that the series
> reactances of the feedline and the wrong kind of air-cored choke can
> sometimes cancel, leading to a higher level of common mode current than
> before. This cannot happen with a ferrite choke that is predominantly
> resistive.
>
> For further information read Steve's page followed perhaps by my own
> article, at:
>
> <http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek/in-prac/index.htm#1005>
>
> That in turn will lead you on to K9YC's much longer papers. Steve, Jim
> and I have different styles of presentation but we're absolutely agreed
> on the one key point: an air-core choke and a ferrite-core choke are
> very different indeed.
>
>
>

--
Sent from my lovely old Dell XPS 420

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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Jim Wiley-2


OK, now I am confused (a normal state of affairs around here)


If a "cracked" toroid core is useless,  then how do the "split bead"
clamp-on cores manage to work?  Isn't the "split" equivalent to as great
big lengthwise crack?


I also seem to remember broken ring cores working again when glued
together.


After all, isn't a ferrite core itself manufactured from ferrite powder
that has been "glued together" by a binding material?  Yes, the
particles are pressed very close to one another,but they are still
individual particles, are they not?


- Jim, KL7CC



John Ragle wrote:
> <snip>
>  

> I agree with the contributor(s) who said that the cracked toroid is
> basically junk. It has lost its utility because the magnetic circuit is
> broken at the crack. It is unlikely that superglue will restore it.
>
> John Ragle -- W1ZI
>
>  
>
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Jack Smith-6
First, even a very thin gap may significantly reduce the core
permeability. A high quality split core will have its mating surfaces
lapped flat.

Second, if the core cracked because of excessive heat, it's likely the
ferrite material incurred irreversible damage.

Jack K8ZOA


On 10/16/2011 5:58 PM, Jim Wiley wrote:

>
> OK, now I am confused (a normal state of affairs around here)
>
>
> If a "cracked" toroid core is useless,  then how do the "split bead"
> clamp-on cores manage to work?  Isn't the "split" equivalent to as great
> big lengthwise crack?
>
>
> I also seem to remember broken ring cores working again when glued
> together.
>
>
> After all, isn't a ferrite core itself manufactured from ferrite powder
> that has been "glued together" by a binding material?  Yes, the
> particles are pressed very close to one another,but they are still
> individual particles, are they not?
>
>
> - Jim, KL7CC
>
>
>
> John Ragle wrote:
>> <snip>
>>
>> I agree with the contributor(s) who said that the cracked toroid is
>> basically junk. It has lost its utility because the magnetic circuit is
>> broken at the crack. It is unlikely that superglue will restore it.
>>
>> John Ragle -- W1ZI
>>
>>
>>
> ______________________________________________________________
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Vic Rosenthal
Some confusion results from the fact that there are two different materials used in
toroids (etc.): Ferrite and powdered iron. Powdered iron cores are composed of tiny
particles which are insulated from one another...so if they break you can glue them back
together and they will work fine.

Ferrite is a ceramic material, and if you glue a broken piece of ferrite back together you
are introducing an insulating gap which breaks the magnetic circuit. Powdered iron is a
bunch of little magnets separated by gaps already.

Baluns seem to be made out of ferrite.


On 10/16/2011 3:13 PM, Jack Smith wrote:

> First, even a very thin gap may significantly reduce the core
> permeability. A high quality split core will have its mating surfaces
> lapped flat.
>
> Second, if the core cracked because of excessive heat, it's likely the
> ferrite material incurred irreversible damage.
>
> Jack K8ZOA
>
>
> On 10/16/2011 5:58 PM, Jim Wiley wrote:
>>
>> OK, now I am confused (a normal state of affairs around here)
>>
>>
>> If a "cracked" toroid core is useless,  then how do the "split bead"
>> clamp-on cores manage to work?  Isn't the "split" equivalent to as great
>> big lengthwise crack?
>>
>>
>> I also seem to remember broken ring cores working again when glued
>> together.
>>
>>
>> After all, isn't a ferrite core itself manufactured from ferrite powder
>> that has been "glued together" by a binding material?  Yes, the
>> particles are pressed very close to one another,but they are still
>> individual particles, are they not?
>>
>>
>> - Jim, KL7CC
>>
>>
>>
>> John Ragle wrote:
>>> <snip>
>>>
>>> I agree with the contributor(s) who said that the cracked toroid is
>>> basically junk. It has lost its utility because the magnetic circuit is
>>> broken at the crack. It is unlikely that superglue will restore it.
>>>
>>> John Ragle -- W1ZI
>>>
>>>


--
Vic, K2VCO
Fresno CA
http://www.qsl.net/k2vco/
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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

John Ragle
In reply to this post by Jim Wiley-2
Jim...

     I think the snap-ons are designed to be lossy devices. They are
designed to be a convenient shape for wires, cords, cables, etc. and to
provide loss for fields that fringe out of those cables. Tiny air gaps
are not particularly important for this function.

     Ferrite donuts used as transformer cores are for transferring
magnetic flux from primary to secondary without leakage.

     In a real balun, the action is as a transformer...remember those
plug-in coils with "links" on them that Millen et al. used to make, back
when...? Those were air-core transformers (and not very efficient...).
The core in the balun on your beam was probably a transformer core.

     Again, 'way back when, when transformers for tube "B+" & filament
voltages were normal parts of power supplies, the windings were on
interleaved, laminated "E"-shaped core material. In those, working at 60
Hz, a tiny air gap could be tolerated, even though its effect was
somewhat like a "magnetic" resistor in the flux path. One does not see
these as much any more, but I can remember taking them apart to harvest
the wire inside...and being left with dozens of the laminations...

John Ragle -- W1ZI

=====

On 10/16/2011 5:58 PM, Jim Wiley wrote:

>
> OK, now I am confused (a normal state of affairs around here)
>
>
> If a "cracked" toroid core is useless,  then how do the "split bead"
> clamp-on cores manage to work?  Isn't the "split" equivalent to as great
> big lengthwise crack?
>
>
> I also seem to remember broken ring cores working again when glued
> together.
>
>
> After all, isn't a ferrite core itself manufactured from ferrite powder
> that has been "glued together" by a binding material?  Yes, the
> particles are pressed very close to one another,but they are still
> individual particles, are they not?
>
>
> - Jim, KL7CC
>
>
>
> John Ragle wrote:
>> <snip>
>>
>> I agree with the contributor(s) who said that the cracked toroid is
>> basically junk. It has lost its utility because the magnetic circuit is
>> broken at the crack. It is unlikely that superglue will restore it.
>>
>> John Ragle -- W1ZI
>>
>>
>>
> ______________________________________________________________
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>
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> Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
>
>
>

--
Sent from my lovely old Dell XPS 420

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Re: Toroid Balun Cores

Jim Brown-10
In reply to this post by Vic Rosenthal
On 10/16/2011 4:29 PM, Vic K2VCO wrote:
> two different materials used in
> toroids (etc.): Ferrite and powdered iron.

AND each generic type -- ferrites and powdered iron -- have many
variations that are VERY different from each other.  The ferrite types
are different as a result of their chemical MIX, and every MIX is
designed for a different use -- that is, suppression over one range of
frequencies and/or inductance in a different range of frequencies.

See the RFI tutorial on my website about these matters.

73, Jim Brown K9YC
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