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Re: [RFI] Fair Rite #31 Mix Material

To: "rfi@contesting.com" <rfi@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Fair Rite #31 Mix Material
From: "Jim Brown" <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2009 20:21:05 -0800
List-post: <rfi@contesting.com">mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
On Sun, 11 Jan 2009 22:45:43 -0500, Paul Christensen wrote:

>but I am curious as to why Fair-Rite has no cores in the 
>traditional thickness and diameter sizes. 

I'll make an educated guess. Fair-Rite makes cores for several 
uses. One major uses are inductors and transformers, where they 
are mostly working in the range where their resistance is small in 
proportion to their inductive reactance (that is, they are 
relatively efficient). Another major use is suppression. For the 
reasons I've shown, ferrites used for suppression are very lossy 
-- they are used at the upper extent of their useful range. 

Those familiar "small donuts" are mostly part of the "inductive" 
component product group. 

You can, for example, find a #43 2.4-inch o.d. toroid (FT-240 in 
Amidon-speak) in two different places in the Fair-Rite catalog. 
There's one that's specified as an inductive component, and 
another that's specified as a suppression component, and different 
parameters are specified for the two classes of components. With 
inductive components, the emphasis is on mu at low frequencies, 
while for suppression components, the emphasis is on minimum or 
typical values of impedance at certain frequencies. They may come 
off the same product line, with a sort at the end of the line, or 
the inductive part may be mfd with a process that results in 
tighter tolerances on mu. 

Hope this helps.

73,

Jim K9YC



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