> We have to be very careful adding reactances in series with the
> common-mode impedance of a system to reduce unwanted current.
> In many cases, we can make the system worse by adding reactance.
>
> 73, Tom W8JI
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I can verify Tom's above assertion. When designing my TRX-16
16:1 transformer, I tried making a two-stage design -- a low-loss
(tightly coupled) 16:1 XFMR plus a choke 'balun.' It did not work
well at all -- the choke had only small effect on isolation. The final
design is a loosly-coupled tranformer with separate primary and
secondary windings, wound on a binocular core made of two 0.5"
OD x 0.4" long cores.
Two transformers back-to-back have a total loss of <1 dB, or
about 0.4 to 0.5 dB per XFMR. The match to a 820 ohm carbon
resistor is always under 1.2:1 throughout an 'assembly line' batch.
For comparison, my TRX-9 9:1 XFMR uses tightly coupled
windings (but still separate primary and secondary) and has about
0.2 dB loss.
73, Gary
K9AY
k9ay@k9ay.com
www.aytechnologies.com
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