Amps
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [Amps] Real time tests to see if an RF transformer is saturating?

To: "'Alan Ibbetson'" <alan@g3xaq.net>, <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] Real time tests to see if an RF transformer is saturating?
From: "JC" <n4is@comcast.net>
Date: Mon, 15 May 2017 10:46:35 -0400
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
Hi guys

Sometimes I was able to find a better price on toroid's here 

http://www.cwsbytemark.com/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=215

Cheers
JC
N4IS

-----Original Message-----
From: Amps [mailto:amps-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Alan Ibbetson
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2017 9:00 AM
To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Real time tests to see if an RF transformer is
saturating?

Chris,

Buy Fair-rite toroids from mouser.co.uk (post free over, I think, £20 or
maybe £25), or uk.rs-online.com who are always post free. Both add VAT to
their catalogue prices.

The pros don't use designators like FT240-78. Those are numbers from the USA
reseller Amidon. You have to search on www.fair-rite.com for the long string
of digits (like 5978003801) and type that into the Mouser or RS search box.
Finding the right part on Fair-rite is a pig. There are drop downs under
Products on the home page but it's never easy.

If I was in your shoes I'd try type 78 and wind on as many turns in a
5:7 ratio as will fit. As Manfred says, several strands of thinner wire
bundled together will be easier to wind and have a bit less copper loss.

Have fun. Almost no radio amateurs of any callsign series understand
magnetics so you are becoming an expert in the hobby!

73, Alan

On 15/05/2017 13:41, Chris Wilson wrote:
>
>
> Hello Alan,
>
> On Sunday, May 14, 2017,  you wrote:
>
>> Chris,
>
>> Nobody is answering so I'll have a go. If I muck up the arithmetic 
>> others will be quick to cut me off at the knees :-)
>
>> I make the max flux density around 160mT (1600 Gauss).
>
>> If you can't be bothered to do the calculation from scratch there's 
>> an online calculator here
>
>> http://www.daycounter.com/Calculators/Max-Flux-Density-Calculator.pht
>> ml
>
>> The data sheet for type 77 material says it has 300mW/cc loss at 
>> 100KHz, the upper freq limit recommended by Fair-rite
>
>> http://www.fair-rite.com/77-material-data-sheet/
>
>> It's probably around 400mW/cc or even more at 136Kz. Your cores have 
>> a mag volume of 22.8cc according to the data sheet
>
>> http://www.fair-rite.com/product/toroids-5978003801/
>
>> so 68.4cc for your stack of three. That makes 27.4W dissipation for 
>> brick on the key WSPR operation. I'm not really surprised the cores 
>> get hot. Fair-rite want you to use type 78 material, which has 1/3 
>> the loss at these frequencies. This was the experience of the guy 
>> who's combiner design you copied
>
>> http://www.w1vd.com/137-500-KWTX.html
>
>> where he says
>
>> "At the kilowatt level issues developed with the output transformer. 
>> The
>> FT-240-77 cores that worked well in the 500-watt deck began to show 
>> signs of 'stress' while testing the prototype 137 kHz kilowatt deck. 
>> The core ran noticeably warm to the touch, transition ringing on the 
>> drain waveform was difficult to tame and efficiency was less than
expected.
>> Additional core losses at the increased power level and excessive 
>> leakage reactance were to blame. After a study of the ferrite 
>> literature, the best solution appeared to be a switch to 78 ferrite 
>> material which was designed specifically for the 100 - 200 kHz 
>> frequency range. As luck would have it, 78 cores were available in 
>> FT-240 size and readily available through several distributors! A few 
>> days later
>> FT-240-78 cores were being tested in the prototype 137 kHz deck. The 
>> cores just warm to the touch, ringing was much easier to tame and 
>> efficiency was back in the mid 90% range".
>
>> To answer your specific question, a scope on the drain will probably 
>> show flat topping if the cores goes into saturation as its inductance 
>> collapses. But in your case it seems unlikely you are saturating the 
>> core, it's just that the AC loss is too high.
>
>> Mouser and RS in the UK stock the type-78 part: Fair Rite 5978003801. 
>> RS is cheaper.
>
>> Hope that helps,
>
>> Alan G3XAQ
>
>>> Date: Sat, 13 May 2017 19:06:59 +0100
>>> From: Chris Wilson <chris@chriswilson.tv>
>>>
>>> Hi. Two off 1kW quasi Class D push pull FET amps on 136khz feeding a 
>>> Wilkinson combiner via the amps own output transformers designed for 
>>> a
>>> 50 ohm load. Combiner built from plans for one to combine two 500 
>>> Watt amps. Combiner's output transformer is three stacked FT-240-77 
>>> ferrite toroids, 5 turns 12 AWG enameled (2mm OD) wire primary. 
>>> Secondary is 7 turns of the same wire. The combiner feeds a big LPF 
>>> bank. At full power the combiner's toroids get hot quite fast with 
>>> WSPR 2 signal applied. Needs a small fan to stay within the realms 
>>> of sensibility, even then it creeps over 70C if left too long. How 
>>> can I tell in real time, with measuring instruments, if it's 
>>> saturating, and if so what cores might be more suitable please? 
>>> Hopefully the schematic of the combiner is linked. Many thanks! Chris
2E0ILY in the UK.
>>>
>>> http://www.w1vd.com/137-500-500WCombiner.pdf
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi Alan, I cannot thank you enough for the reply on the "AMPS" forum 
> to my questions. I did use 78 material for the two amps built to 
> W1VD's specs i have built, and guessed he may not have updated his 
> pages to reflect this better material for use in the combiner, but i 
> thought i wouldn't be to clever and change anything. a subsequent 
> correspondence with Jay, W1VD showed he intended the combiner to be 
> used with 2 of his 500W amps, so I am pushing the limits presumably 
> with whatever material. I see Fair-Rite lit a 98 material which is 
> supposedly better agin than 78, but getting info on what sized toroids 
> are available in 98 is proving difficult. Also, Fair-Rite USA charge 
> insane postage to the UK making small orders very costly.
>
> Even with the combiner gate and drain waveforms seem good, with a 
> slightly more spiky edge to the drain ones when combining, so i guess 
> the saturation level hasn't been exceeded, but material choice is 
> poor, and maybe turns counts are sub optimal for this power level.
>
>
> I will try two approaches, a copy of my existing combiner transformer 
> using spare 78 compound FT-240 sized toroids I have to hand, and 
> another with the tripled turns count Manfred kindly suggested. The 
> problem with LF for a 2E0 is the guys running "down there" are all 
> very experienced and their replies are often a bit over my head, 
> especially as I foolishly chose to lark about in maths classes, much 
> to my regret when I took up amateur radio at over 60 years of age.
>
> My teacher's words never rang so true, "Wilson, one day you'll wish 
> you had paid more attention, as maths is often needed to do things 
> that interest you, rather than just at a purely academic level that 
> you seem to find so unimportant and boring". Damn, he was dead 
> right.... :(
>
>
> Much appreciated, and thank you again Alan!!
>
>

-- 

Alan Ibbetson
alan@g3xaq.net
_______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps

_______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>