[TowerTalk] making air wound coils (was Johnson Matchbox coil)

Rob Atkinson ranchorobbo at gmail.com
Sun Jul 27 22:53:34 EDT 2008


It turns out the article I mentioned was in two parts in the May and
June 2008 issues of CQ.  It is "Build Your Own Air-Wound Coils" by
Phil Salas AD5X and is in the Weekender column in those two issues.
He has what seems to be a rough draft of the article on-line as a pdf
file, and it may contain all of the important points.  It is here:

http://www.ad5x.com/images/Articles/CoilRevB.pdf

73,

rob / k5uj


Rob Atkinson wrote:
> One of the ham magazines, either CQ or QST (but I'm pretty sure it was
> CQ) had a good article with photos a month or three ago on how to make
> your own air wound coils, including how to fabricate the spacers.  If
> you can get access to CQ for the past six months (i.e. if you know
> someone who subscribes) go through them and it should be in there.
>
I always figured if it had spacers, like the plastic strips in "Air dux"
it wasn't really "air wound", but aside from that technicality spacing
"air wound coils" from relatively small wire to large tubing is quite
simple. There are about as many methods of making spacers as there are
peoples imaginations and the desired appearance of the end product.

To wind a coil usually takes a form, but I've wound many from half inch
copper tubing down to literally thousands out of 1/8" pure (pure to 5
nines) silver  and most sizes in between strictly by hand.
So to do the winding you usually need a form somewhat smaller than the
end result for the coil. (after winding it'll spring out in diameter and
maybe lose a turn or two.  If you use "strips" of plastic, the coil
and/or strip needs to be held solidly. The coil can be heated so sink
into the plastic or glued in place.  Typically "spacers" are used with
tubing and glued in place. (they can also have flanges that keep them in
place). Winding over the pacers usually produces a noticeable flat spot
between the spacers.

I've also seen flat 1/4" thick plastic sheet used with groves cut on
each side for the coil. A "Rat Tail" file does a nice job of making the
indentations or the sheet can be drilled and then the edges cut off.
Some one used to sell a ready made tank coil like that.

I don't remember the article listed above, but it probably will take you
through it step-by-step.

73 and good luck,

Roger (K8RI - ARRL Life Member)
www.rogerhalstead.com
N833R (World's oldest Debonair)


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