Posted by
Jim Brown-10 on
Sep 03, 2020; 6:53am
URL: http://elecraft.85.s1.nabble.com/OT-WWV-Time-Transmissions-tp7664561p7664649.html
On 9/2/2020 9:02 PM, Adrian wrote:
> A dielectric is defined as an insulator . A ferrite core is not a
> dielectric (insulator), This is the false fact in your theory.
You have massive gaps in your understanding of how common mode chokes
work and the properties of ferrite materials. The best technical data
refererence I know of Fair-Rite's catalog, which is online and can be
downloaded as a pdf.
https://ebiz.fair-rite.com/newfair/pdf/Fair-Rite_Catalog_17th_Edition.pdfThe fundamental properties of ferrite materials vary widely depending on
their chemical composition, commonly called "the mix," and each mix is
tailored to a specific range of applications. A table summarizing those
properties begins on page 4 in the print version, page 6 of the pdf. The
resistivity of the materials listed varies over 7 orders of magnitude,
from 50 ohm-cm to 10 exp9 ohm-cm.
My tutorial on how common mode chokes work is here.
k9yc.com/RFI-Ham.pdf
The concepts were added to the ARRL Handbook around 2011. Designs for
practical transmitting chokes are here.
http://k9yc.com/2018Cookbook.pdfNote that these are not "baluns," a word that describes at least ten
very different physical things, but rather common mode chokes. Their
sole function is to minimize common mode current. They do not do
impedance matching. That function is provided by very different things
best called tranformer baluns, and they come in multiple forms.
Extensive research I published in a peer reviewed AES paper in 2003
found manufacturer's literature from the '50s/'60s indicating that they
understood how common mode chokes work, and after I published my work to
the ham community, an engineering manager from the CIA passed along to
me an unclassified engineering report from the US Army in the '70s that
was in agreement with all of the fundamental concepts I had published
and had developed a family of designs for field use. The only thing they
missed was the property of dimensional resonance, which I learned about
in classic reference a colleague found in the U of Chicago engineering
library. That reference, by E. C. Snelling, is cited in several of my
publications.
73, Jim K9YC
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