Snap on Ferrite's have their uses...
Perhaps a better way to look at it might be to think of snap on ferrite
material as a substitute for when a more normal core can not be used.
I have some snap ons that work very well. Well being defined as the
ability to stop an RFI event. I use at least two snap ons on every wall
wart, one at the wall wart, and one at the device. I take up all slack
in the power cable by wrapping half the the excess power cable on each core.
Snap on cores are far less effective than a solid core, however if you
can get enough impedance at the selected frequency, a snap on will
suppress RFI well enough.
73s and thanks,
Dave
NK7Z
http://www.nk7z.net
On 06/18/2017 07:44 PM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
I was reading the recent QST article RF Mayhem by WB8IMY. The author said to
avoid using snap-on ferrites for problems caused by HF signals as they
rarely work well at HF. It is best to stick with circular cores.
Is this correct? I was not aware that snap-ons were less effective.
John KK9A
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