Original poster: "Gerry  Reynolds" <gerryreynolds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi Bart,
I finished the proximitry effects portion of Gary's paper and will 
share my opinion.  Basically, there are two choices given in the 
paper - the Medhurst Resistance table and the Fraga equation.  I 
was leaning toward the Medhurst approach until the end and after 
much thought I changed my mind and now think we ought to implement 
the Fraga equation.  Here are my reasons:
MEDHURST:  This method was emperically developed by Medhurst and 
involves a lookup table where normalized wire spacing and aspect 
ratio are used to find the ratio of Rm/Rac.  I will use Rm  to 
denote the Medhurst resistance and Rf to denote the Fraga 
resistance.  The following are the conditions or assumptions Medhurst used:
a.  Rm = CFm * Rac   where CFm is the Medhurst correction factor, 
the value of which comes from his table.
b.  The coils Medhurst wound were about 30-50 turns of wire.
c.  Medhurst tested at a high frequency (1MHz) where the proximitry 
effect was fully developed (saturated).
Gary modified his equation to allow usefulness at lower frequencies 
for which the proximitry effect may not be fully saturated by 
intoducing a monotonic function "kf" that varies between 0 and 1.
Rm = (1 + kf(CFm - 1))Rac    at DC kf=0, Rm=Rac=Rdc
                                              at high freq, kf=1 
and reverts to Medhurst's original equation
The down side to this approach is that the kf function has not been 
defined. The approach works better for coils with smaller number of 
turns (or small aspect ratios) than what we are use to winding and 
operating at frequencies perhaps higher than typical for TC's.  One 
needs to determine the Rac with no proximitry first and then apply 
the proximtry correction factor CFm.  The upside is provisions for 
space wound coils.
FRAGA:  This method uses an equation (a complicated one) to predict 
the effective resistance Rf that includes skin effect, proximitry 
effect, and the degree that the proximitry effect is fully saturated.
The following are the conditions or assumtions Fraga used:
a.  Long coils
b. Close wound
c. Coils with negligible distributed capacitance (constant current 
from bottom to top)
d. Low freqency operation (wr <= sd)
e. Mulilayered coils
Rf = [2pi*N^2*a* effective_rho*(sinh(2theta)+sin(2theta)) ]  /
       [effective_sd*Lw*(cosh(2theta)-cos(2theta)) ]
[note the hyperbolic transendental functions]
where N = number of turns
         a = radius of coil (meters)
         Lw = winding length of coil (meters)
         effective_rho = 2rho(1+s/b)/sqrt(pi)
         rho = resistivity = 1.724E-8 ohm meters for copper at 20 degrees C
         b = radius of the wire copper (meters)
         s = thickness of wire insulation (meters)
         effective_sd = 0.0702*sqrt[(1+s/b)/f} (meters)
         f = frequency (Hz)
         theta = b*sqrt(pi) / effective_sd  (I'm guessing units in radians)
Downside of Fraga is it can't properly deal with short or space wound coils.
Gary had nine coils designated 12T, 14S, 14T, 16B, 18B, 18T, 20T, 
22T, and 22B.  The number reflects the awg wire used.  T is tight 
(close) wound, S is space wound, and B is some sort of barrel 
shaped form where the form sides are not parallel and was both 
close and space wound.  He put these coils to the test and compared 
Rm, Rf, and Rmeasured.  All were compared at the coil's natural 
frequency.  In addition, all but 12T were also compared with two 
different size top loads. Im not reporting the B coils as I was not 
sure what these coils are.  The 12T, 14S, 22T coils also are not 
being reported because either they didn't use magnet wire and had 
thick insulation or were space wound.  The remainding 14T, 18T, and 
20T coils all used magnet wire, were close wound, and had an aspect 
ratios close to what we use.  These were more of the norm and 
seemed more appropriate for reporting.
14T:  aspect = 6.5 and Rdc = 4.45 ohms
       Rm     = 46.4 ohms @ 251 KHz fo
       Rf       = 44.1 ohms
       Rmeas = 43.5 ohms
       Rm     = 41.7 ohms @ 211 KHz
       Rf       = 40.5 ohms
       Rmeas = 42.3 ohms
       Rm     = 35.9 ohms @ 152 KHz
       Rf       = 34.3 ohms
       Rmeas = 39.6 ohms
18T:  aspect = 4.1 and Rdc = 11.2 ohms
       Rm     = 76.5 ohms @ 237 KHz fo
       Rf       = 67.6 ohms
       Rmeas = 70.5 ohms
       Rm     = 66.5 ohms @ 176 KHz
       Rf       = 58.2 ohms
       Rmeas = 65.9 ohms
       Rm     = 57.0 ohms @ 123 KHz
       Rf       = 48.6 ohms
       Rmeas = 58.1 ohms
20T:  aspect = 4.4  and Rdc 23.4
       Rm     = 111.4ohms @ 181 KHz fo
       Rf       = 97.3 ohms
       Rmeas = 94.2 ohms
       Rm     = 98.4 ohms @ 136 KHz
       Rf       = 84.5 ohms
       Rmeas = 88.0 ohms
       Rm     = 85.0 ohms @ 94 KHz
       Rf       = 70.4 ohms
       Rmeas = 78.7 ohms
It should be noted that the Fraga prediction was always lower than 
the Medhurst and that the measured resistance includes all losses 
not just the copper loss.  At first glance, it would seem that 
Medhurst might come closer to the measured resistance than Fraga 
(at least for the higher frequency coils).  Gary did a more 
in-depth test of coil 14T where he varied the resonant frequency by 
changing descrete caps loading the top of the coil. With this test, 
one can easily see the proximitry effect weaken as the frequency is 
reduced.  The Frada equation also predicts this weakening and 
agreed very well with the measurements.  It was this factor that 
convinced me that Frada's equation may be more useful.
Gerry R.
Original poster: "Barton B. Anderson" <bartb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi Gerry,
Yes, there is much to be pondered on Gary's work. With this 
particular paper, I was impressed with his methods of measurement. 
I was satisfied that he explained the difficulties and how he 
overcame them. I was also very impressed with his adding of C to 
the topload to drop the frequency and how he went about it.
I'm not satisfied that his conclusions are right or wrong on every 
aspect (some are obviously correct, others require further 
assessment and measurement).
For the post at hand, Gary has already done the hard work for us. 
All we need to do is verify with a number of coils to get a good 
realization of our secondary losses. I don't expect Medhurst to 
perform well with our coils. His data just does not represent the 
full spectrum. It is correct for the spectrum he measured, but it 
would be helpful to simply perform the same with our coil 
specification range. If I had the time and the money, I'd love 
nothing more than to do just that. Such is life.
BTW, I expect your coil based on Terman at 53.92 ohms, and 
interestingly, Antonio's form at 61.95 ohms. Quite a difference! 
Also, both are quite different from the standard text book 38.24 
ohms. I wonder which is right? Q will tell the tale, but that 
assumes Q measurement is correct, and we all know, there are a lot 
of "what can go wrong will go wrong" when measuring Q.
I'll be interested in what you come up with. Do you have all the 
goodies? Low Z amp? etc... If you need one, just ask. I can send 
my own your way or Terry may be able to londer his, etc. I think 
it's definitely worthwhile. Also, I would set up a flat ground 
plane for measurement somewhere where external effects are not 
capable of much influence. When I make Q measurements, I always do 
these in the backyard so that there is nothing to affect the 
reading. I keep the probe at least 10 feet away from the coil at 
center toroid height. I'll usually throw down a flat metal plate 
equal to the toroid OD for the ground plane. My personal coils 
have been rather low Q (300's range). It will be interesting if 
you can measure in the predicted 600's range.