As far as I know, Fair-Rite is the only manufacturer of this material,
which they developed around 2001. They sell through at least a half
dozen distributors. Ham distributors, like kitsandparts are notoriously
expensive, but they do sell onesey-twosey. FAR better to go to one of
the mainstream industrial vendors and buy in quantity. My current
favorite for quantity purchases is Dexter Magnetics, near Chicago. I've
also heard good things about Lodestone Pacific.
To build quantity, combine your needs with those of other local hams who
are active on the HF bands. I've both organized group purchases and
participated in group purchases organized by others. See Appendix One of
my RFI tutorial for some specific advice. k9yc.com/RFI-Ham.pdf You do
NOT want to re-ship ferrite cores -- it's expensive and they break.
The last time I bought medium quantity (about 50) of #31 2.4 cores, I
paid about $5, including the cost of tax and shipping.
73, Jim K9YC
On Tue,4/28/2015 7:47 AM, Alex Malyava wrote:
Hi Jim,
Do you have any recommendation on manufacturer/part# for 2.4" #31 cores?
Fair-Rite part # for this core is #2631803802.
mouser.com
<http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Fair-Rite/2631803802/> and
parts.arrow.com
<http://parts.arrow.com/item/detail/fair-rite-products/2631803802#nQpJ> both sell
them under that exact part #
What about FT240-31 cores (http://toroids.info/FT240-31.php) that
kitsandparts.com <http://kitsandparts.com> sells?
Is it the same or I should stay away from it?
Thanks,
Alex K2BB
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 12:41 PM, Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
<mailto:jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>> wrote:
On Mon,4/27/2015 6:50 AM, Alex Malyava wrote:
What would be the bestest design for choke or balun to be used
with dipole
or OCF dipole?
Like what type of core, number of turns or number of beads?
k9yc.com/RFI-Ham.pdf <http://k9yc.com/RFI-Ham.pdf>
See the Choke Cookbook and text that precedes it.
An off-center fed antenna is inherently poorly balanced, so it
puts a high common mode current on the feedline, which in turn
places a high common mode voltage across any choke. It is well
known that even very good common mode chokes are likely to fry
(fail destructively) when used with even moderate power levels.
You MIGHT get away with it at 100W, but at some higher power level
it WILL break.
73, Jim K9YC
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