Thanks Jim,
Where can I buy the
At 09:01 AM 1/12/2005, you wrote:
On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 22:12:21 -0600, Ron Feutz wrote:
>I think the answer is big torroids on the incoming AC, CAT5 and phone lines
>to the digital convertors.
>
> From reading the archives, 2" #73 torroids appear to be right.
I've been doing considerable research on that, and can offer this advice. The
Fair-Rite 2.4" O.D. toroids are listed in the catalog with #43, #78, and #61.
I've also just received (and measured) samples of #31.
For 160-40 meters, first choice would be 7 turns around #31 (if you can
find it),
second choice would be 10-12 turns around #43. The advantage of #31 is
that it
gives more attenuation over greater bandwidth and does it with fewer turns.
The #78 material isn't very useful about about 4 MHz, and it takes 14
turns to
get that high. The #61 material has far too high a Q to be broadband
enough to
cover 160-40, and it would take more turns than you could wind. #73 is a nice
material, but is used only for much smaller beads.
Now, to prioritize which wiring should get the chokes first -- I would
look for
obvious pin 1 problems and hit those first. If you want to go brute force, do
them all. The advantage of this size of core is that you can get a lot of
turns
through it, often without taking off connectors.
BTW -- choking the Ethernet cable will also kill some of the common-mode
trash it
radiates on the ham bands.
Jim Brown K9YC
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Ron Feutz, KK9K
Air Communications of Central Wisconsin, Inc.
715-424-3050 days
715-423-7662 nights
715-572-3621 cell
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