On 11/14/19 6:26 PM, jimlux wrote:
 
On 11/14/19 6:08 PM, Robert Harmon wrote:
 Interesting stuff.  I got on the Trilogy website, they have a 
corrugated copper outer conductor too.  Can't
find loss specs for lower HF freqs.  Also suppliers and cost.
  
 For HF, the loss is dominated by the skin effect in the shield and 
center conductor - especially for hardline, which has almost no 
dielectric.  So the loss will go as sqrt(f).   If the loss is, say, 
10dB/ft at 10 MHz it will be 3.2 dB/ft at 1 MHz.
More details here:
https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/coax-loss-calculations
 
 
 One thing to watch out for - if either shield or center conductor is 
plated, or small enough that it's not "many" skin depths thick, then it 
gets more complex.
 However, our trusty friend RG-8 has an AWG 13 center conductor which is 
some  72 mils in diameter, and skin depth at 1 MHz in copper is 2.5 mils.
 You can get bit on cable TV coax which sometimes has a very, very thin 
layer of copper on a steel core. At 100 MHz, skin depth is 0.25 mil, and 
it gets smaller as you go higher.
 Magnetic materials under the conductor are a particular evil. (steel 
cores, nickle plate under a gold flash..)
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