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Re: Toroid core material
Original poster: "Malcolm Watts by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <m.j.watts-at-massey.ac.nz>
Hi Weazel,
On 25 Jul 2003, at 5:29, Tesla list wrote:
> Original poster: "J. B. Weazle McCreath by way of Terry Fritz
<teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <weazle-at-hurontel.on.ca>
>
>
> Hello Coilers,
>
> I've some info and a question for my fellow coilers regarding various
> materials used in making toroid cores and their usefulness as chokes
> in TC service.
>
> As an RF filter in the hot lead of my PDT was a three turn choke that
> I'd wound on a toroid core removed from an old computer power supply.
> After a minute or so run time of the coil, the core material was hot
> to the point of being uncomfortable to hold onto. This indicated it
> was pretty lossy, so I tried another core which had started life as
> an 88 mH. "telephone choke coil" and noticed no heating even after
> several minutes run time of the coil.
>
> It would seem that we need to choose the core material carefully for
> this type of use. The big question is, what is the core material of
> the computer PS toroid and of the 88 mH. toroid? They are obviously
> quite different in composition, no doubt due to the frequencies they
> where chosen to work at in their original uses. I suspect that the
> computer toroid worked in the 10's of kHz. range while the telephone
> one likely was for voice frequencies of less than 3 kHz.
The toroid from the computer supply would have been an iron powder
core. This core has a low permeability/induction factor and a
distributed airgap. It is designed for chokes whose windings carry a
high level of DC and is used for both energy storage and load
balancing in these supplies. It will lose a lot of power if you
impress high levels of flux change on it. The other core would
undoubtably have been a signal grade ferrite (3B7 or something
similar).
Malcolm
> 73, Weazle, VE3EAR/VE3WZL
>
> Details of my "Hyperbaric Gap" and Tesla coil are at:
> http://www.hurontel.on.ca/~weazle
>
>
>