Tuesday, November 08, 2005

 

A different way of making variable inductors

From a note by Ed Tanton, N4XY, to QRP-L 08 Apr 2003:

"OK... I took one of these [surplus SMT] inductors and measured it at 525nH (0.5mH) [...] and brought the inductor near the 'face' of the 1.5' x 3.5' x 5/16' (3.5cm x 8.9cm x 0.8cm) magnet. Interesting: the inductance changed to ~ 200nH (0.2uH). Then, I moved the tweezers/inductor to the end of the magnet. Wow. The inductance went from its usual 525nH to 43nH (0.043uH)!!!"

Merton Nellis, W0UFO, commented:

Yes, inductors with magnetic material as cores change inductance from a maximum with no biasing magnetic field to a lower value as a bias field is applied. [...] The bias field can be applied to a core with a separate winding carrying d.c. rather than with a permanent magnet. This principle is used to make saturable reactor controls and magnetic amplifiers.

Mounting a magnet near a toroid with a screw for adjustment would let you build variable inductors without having to locate a slug-tuned coil form. Also, it could be used to build an SMT variable inductor with an adjustment big enough to be useful. Attaching a man-sized knob directly to a eensy SMT inductor is begging for the leads to be torn off the board.

Comments:
This is an excellent article which I was able to learn lot of things from the content. Appreciate it very much that you are keeping it up to date. We new comers to Amateur Radio is finding these types of articles very encouraging. If you have time, just go to https://www.hamtourism.com and let us know your comments.

Regards.
 
Post a Comment

<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?