Well everything has some inductance, but in the wirewounds case.. there was a
scrambled wound resistor that would have lower
inductance compared to a normal sequentially wound wire resistor... and smd
carbon film resistors come pretty close to being non
inductive...
73's
Kevin
wa6fwf
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dr. David Kirkby" <drkirkby@ntlworld.com>
To: <amps@contesting.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 08, 2003 2:44 PM
Subject: Re: [Amps] SELL: 6 Bleeder Resistors 40K@100W
> Pete Smith wrote:
> >
> > At 02:57 PM 2/8/03 -0500, w2cqm@juno.com wrote:
> > >Offering six (6) like new, high quality 40,000ohm 100W wire wound
> > >bleeder resistors. Porcelain base, chromed end caps, and finished in a
> > >smooth green enameled outercoating. Units appear to be non-inductive.
> >
> > OK, I give up, how can a wire-wound resistor be non-inductive?
> How can *any* resistor be made non-inductive ?
> --
> Dr. David Kirkby,
> Senior Research Fellow,
> Department of Medical Physics,
> University College London,
> 11-20 Capper St, London, WC1E 6JA.
> Tel: 020 7679 6408 Fax: 020 7679 6269
> Internal telephone: ext 46408
> e-mail davek@medphys.ucl.ac.uk
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