Angelo,
The wire is sized for it's current carrying capacity first. In HV anode
circuits your looking at maybe 2 amps so the wire is pretty small. The other
reason is using larger wire makes for the choke to either be longer or larger
in diameter to give the same inductance. Chokes or transformers are mounted at
right angles to one another to de-couple them, or kill out reactions between
the two. Hope this helps.
Best,
Will
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 8/6/05 at 3:59 AM Angelo Karabetsos wrote:
>Hello,
>I noticed that most plate chokes are wound with very thin gauge wire and
>varying diameter. I assume that would make it quite resistive/lossy. Some
>are split and mounted at right angles. Is there an advantage to using a
>thin
>gauge conductor other than space considerations?
>73 VE3YN
>
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