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Re: [TowerTalk] Balun for Force 12 6 Element 20 Meter Monobander

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Balun for Force 12 6 Element 20 Meter Monobander
From: jimlux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Tue, 21 Jul 2020 15:30:08 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 7/21/20 1:32 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
On 7/21/2020 10:38 AM, Steve Maki wrote:
 From what I've heard, the properties of ferrites can vary wildly, especially from run to run, so unless you measure the one you make, you don't know.

OTOH, I'm not sure that it's possible to make a choke using recommended (by K9YC) method & parts and end up with a *useless* choke.

My recent (2018) Cookbook is the result of measuring several hundred #31 cores, selecting four at opposing limits of their characteristics, winding chokes on each, and tabulating Z data in a spreadsheet for each ham band. Recommendations for each band and each cable type are on the basis of the choke meeting spec on the WORST of those cores as well as the best.


Of course, the "requirements" for the choke are sort of fuzzy anyway - you want about X ohms, where X is "big" compared to the impedance at the point being choked (which may not be 50 ohms..) because the idea is to keep currents at "much lower" than the currents in the antenna so that the pattern isn't perturbed.

Much lower is kind of a fuzzy thing too.. Is it 20 dB (1/10th the current?) 40 dB (1/100th the current?)

The current where? at the feedpoint? at the tips?

So we handwave a bit and say "the current at the feedpoint" vs "the current on the coax" should be 100:1, which is 40 dB down (a lot.. something at -40dB is truly "negligible" in ham antenna world).

And that leads to a "choking impedance should be around 5k" which is 100x.

But if it's 4k, it's still good. If it's 3k, it's still good.

I think the value of Jim's cookbook is not so much the choking impedance, per-se, but that he's

a) bounded the core variability (designed for worst observed case performance of the core) b) also taken into account side effects like resonance and leakage capacitance

The latter is MUCH less affected by core properties (I think, Jim can correct me if I'm wrong).

And one can *always" construct pathological cases..

You have a 2 element beam, there's a choke at the feedpoint, and you route the coax diagonally from there to the middle of one of the arms of the driven element, with a dangling loop, so it's 1/4 wavelength long, and then you loop it to the end of the element, with another 1/4 wavelength. What you've done is essentially drape another resonant dipole over your antenna.

I suspect that the choke at the feedpoint is almost immaterial in this scenario.

(lest one think this is bizarre and unrealistic, I've seen similar things in lab setups at UHF on a bench, where they had test leads in the wrong place forming parasitic elements, and were wondering why the S11 of their antenna made no sense. Clearly, they didn't draw the boundary around the antenna properly)


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