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Toroid Rings.

johnsmalley
johnsmalley over 6 years ago

Choosing the correct toroid ring.....

 

I’d like guidance on choosing the best component for a try at making a 60KHz RF amplification strip for a (kind of) TRF radio receiver. Having tried to study the topic, I think I now know less than I did to begin with! image

 

As a starting point consider the cost as no object, and a selection can only be made from the stock list of Farnell, with whom I have a trade A/C. The overriding need - as I understand it - will be for the best possible Q.

 

I have a small selection of ‘magnet wire’ + some 68 x 0.04mm Litz wire.

 

Wisdom, guidance, etc, most gratefully received.

 

Thanks.

 

John

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  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to shabaz +5 suggested
    A toroid won't work like a ferrite rod aerial - put simply there is no way for the magnetic component of the RF to get into the core and generate emf in the coil;. I was interested in this too - so I've…
  • johnsmalley
    johnsmalley over 6 years ago in reply to 14rhb +5 suggested
    Guys .... Thanks for the responses. Just to clear it up, I’m *not* trying to use a toroid core as an antenna. I’ll mess with a ferrite rod for that. The toroids are for a kind of IF strip but, of course…
  • 14rhb
    14rhb over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley +5 suggested
    I'm old too . I think your question has been answered in my absence by several knowledgeable Element14 members. The blogs are a nice way of sharing our fun and experiences in electronics (and related disciplines…
  • johnsmalley
    0 johnsmalley over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Thanks. But what Is a blog? What does it do and what is it for?

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    Here's a link to one I prepared earlier.

     

    Capacitor Leakage Current over Temperature

     

    It describes some experiments I did to measure some aspects of the performance of capacitors.

     

    When I get my ferrite rods I'll make an aerial and blog about it - just like writing the experiment up in a notebook like we did in the olden days.

     

    MK

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  • dougw
    0 dougw over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    blog is short for web log. element14 provides tools and resources to create, store and publish notes and logs on projects that members create.

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  • 14rhb
    0 14rhb over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    I'm old too image.

     

    I think your question has been answered in my absence by several knowledgeable Element14 members.

     

    The blogs are a nice way of sharing our fun and experiences in electronics (and related disciplines) with like-minded folk. The modern day equivalent of a show-and-tell I guess. Once someone makes a blog (plenty of photos and pictures/diagrams) they often get a flurry on interesting comments - sometimes the discussions go on for weeks. If someone writes a blog on something they may highlight issues they had or are experiencing - again fellow E14 members often add helpful comments.

     

    It really is a great community - I encourage you to at the very least log in often and watch the content, or better still just jump straight in image.  If you are ever in doubt, just ask in the same way you started this discussion.

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  • johnsmalley
    0 johnsmalley over 6 years ago in reply to 14rhb

    Thanks, all. I now know what a blog is!

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  • johnsmalley
    0 johnsmalley over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    Returning to my original post, perhaps I should have asked about the best way to make a high Q coil for a tank circuit at 60KHz.

     

    I now realise that it might or might not involve a toroid. And I also realise that a tank circuit at this frequency might or might not be the optimum way to get the best selectivity.

     

    Maybe I should be seeking guidance on the best way to make a high Q coil at 60KHz. I'm assuming there will be some basic guidelines, even if in the end such a concept is just not good enough?

     

    Views?

     

    Thanks.

     

    John

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  • dougw
    0 dougw over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    If (decades old) memory serves, high Q coils are characterized by large diameter air core windings with gaps between each turn of low impedance wire.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    Also, it's a compromise. If you choose a material and/or dimensions such that you need fewer turns, then Q can be higher. So you'd think you should go for a material that need fewer turns, but such material varies more with temperature, which then means your high Q resonant circuit might shift in frequency. Plus, the larger it is, the more resistance. So then you could choose thicker wire to reduce resistance but then you may not have space to get as many turns to reach the required inductance. You could space the turns but then that affects inductance and you may not be able to fit the amount of turns without thinner wire. In summary the parameters are interdependent, and I don't know of any software that would help. You could design such software to iterate, varying each parameter bit-by-bit, and give you an answer, but it's a big task maybe.

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to johnsmalley

    At 60kHz your best bet is a pot core, if you want to use an inductor.

     

    You need a gapped core (ones without gaps are good for power but less good for filters), made from a ferrite suitable for filters in the frequency range you are interested in.

     

    The EPCOS (TDK) https://www.mouser.co.uk/ProductDetail/EPCOS-TDK/B65811F315A48?qs=sGAEpiMZZMs2JV%252BnT%2FvX8JpxZdCKKXlRTnIVKnqpr08%3D

     

    will do.

     

    The Al value is 630nH per turn so 100 turns will get you 6.3mH.

     

    It's hard to find anyone in the UK with a good range of pot cores now so you'll need to go to Mouser for these. (They have a UK based web site).

    You will need a bobbin and clips to hold the cores together.

     

    I'll leave you to do some reading - download the data sheet from Mouser.

     

    This core can accept an adjuster.

     

    MK.

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    The ferrite rods just turned up image

     

    image

     

    On their way back !

     

    They were just put 5 per little jiffy bag and able to smash each other up.

     

    MK

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