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#1
posted to rec.boats.building,rec.boats.electronics
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RF Grounding - DC block
Here, on page 23...
http://www.icomamerica.com/support/k...?Download=1265 ....Icom shows four 0.15 uf capacitors in parallel acting as a DC block / galvanic isolator in the RF ground circuit of an SSB system. I assume the caps are in parallel to increase the voltage rating...? Are these plain old ceramic caps, like an 'orange drop' - say 400 VDC? Many Thanks. |
#3
posted to rec.boats.building,rec.boats.electronics
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RF Grounding - DC block
wrote:
.. Here, on page 23... http://www.icomamerica.com/support/k...?Download=1265 ...Icom shows four 0.15 uf capacitors in parallel acting as a DC block / galvanic isolator in the RF ground circuit of an SSB system. I assume the caps are in parallel to increase the voltage rating...? Are these plain old ceramic caps, like an 'orange drop' - say 400 VDC? Many Thanks. The transmitter wants to pass 150 watts to an antenna via a 50 ohm coaxial cable. Thats a feed current of about 1.7 amps (I^2.R = 150W) The transmitter would prefer not to use any of those 150 watts on heating up a capacitor or wire, so they specify an AC resistance much less than 50 ohms for the antenna ground path at the lowest frequency of interest. Let's say at 3 MHz you want to use a DC blocker that looks like less than 1% of 50 ohms. 1/100 X 50 ohms = 1 / (2.pi.f.C) so C = 1 / (2.pi.3X10^6 X 0.5) = 0.1 microFarads or more. On the face of it, just one cap would do it. But there are practical issues. There is an inductance associated with each capacitor, so the AC resistance of a single cap starts rising again at some frequency. If you put four in parallel, then this inductance is divided by four, while the capacitance is multiplied by four. Sometimes, designers put a low value capacitor in parallel with the others, because this has low series inductance at high frequencies... They are in parallel, so the voltage rating stays the same. That's the main reason for paralleling them - to keep the AC resistance LOW at any frequency you might tune, no matter how high. Ceramic caps are useful at high-frequency and they are durable - may be variable with temperature - but that's not critical here. Brian W Refs: Electronics G.H Olsen. Butterworths The Art of Electronics Horowitz & Hill Cambridge UP |
#4
posted to rec.boats.building,rec.boats.electronics
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RF Grounding - DC block
wrote in news:294238b7-5ddf-47d5-b576-
: Here, on page 23... http://www.icomamerica.com/support/k...?Download=1265 ...Icom shows four 0.15 uf capacitors in parallel acting as a DC block / galvanic isolator in the RF ground circuit of an SSB system. I assume the caps are in parallel to increase the voltage rating...? Are these plain old ceramic caps, like an 'orange drop' - say 400 VDC? Many Thanks. Nope. The caps are in parallel to increase the total capacitance. The DC voltage is less than a volt! The RF voltage is zero because the caps act like a short to high frequency RF. It's better to use 4 .15uf caps instead of one .6uf cap, too, by the way. The more caps you put in parallel, the less the series inductance (divides by 4) that reduce the RF pass through from the cap wires and internal inductance caused by the way cheap caps are made. 4 caps will also handle 4 times the RF current than one cap. High current RF capacitors look like this, at these frequencies: Two factors determine how much RF current we can put through them, the capacitive reactance at this RF frequency and their maximum voltage rating. Here's a little note if you'd like to read about it: http://www.johansontechnology.com/im...s/rf/JTI_RF_9- 01.pdf So, if we have .6uf at 4 Mhz and the cap is rated at 400V peak we can get Xc = 1/2piFC = .066 ohms...very low. I=Er/Xc = 400/.066 = 6060A. Sounds good until you look at the wires leading out of it...(c;] Other factors, obviously, are involved. At 150 watts on 4 Mhz, the capacitor is a virtual short and you'll see no voltage across it with very short wires. The series inductance of the ground wiring is what tears up the effective RF grounding to the tuner. Boaters LOVE neatness! Every time you make a neat-looking corner on the ground strap, you add inductance that reduces the effectiveness of the grounding. Every time you add length, same results. Ground straps need to be large in cross sectional area and as short as is possible.....not the neatest installation to show off... Here's what REAL RF capacitors used in high powered MF and HF broadcast transmitters look like and how much current they can withstand: http://www.surplussales.com/Capacito...ps/MicaTransP- ECap.html Obviously, looking at the SURPLUS prices from Surplus Sales, you don't want...or need...them. You have to experience one exploding inside the cabinet you're sitting next to to appreciate the RF power's capabilities....(c;] Broadcast engineering is like fire fighter....months of utter boredom separated by milliseconds of heart-stopping sheer terror. -- ----- Larry Been there...done that. |
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