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Art Unwin, KB9MZ wrote:
"The markings are 3600 - 5000 KC." "KC" may date the variometer back several decades or more. Inductance has units of flux linkages per amp. A single-layer solenoid has an inductance in microhenries of: L = (n squared) (d) (form factor) n = number of turns d = diameter of the coil form factor = complicated constant that depends on the length to diameter ratio See Terman`s 1955 edition, page 11 for the inductance story. Inductance does not have a frequency term in its formula, but inductive reactance is proportional to frrequency. I guess that the variometer`s frequency markings are related to Q. Resistance rises as the sq rt of frequency due to skin effect. Q will be inversely proportional to r-f resistance in a coil. As Reg Edwards has already said, a variometer`s Q is likely very poor when set for low inductance. Q is XL/R. Changing the variometer`s inductance setting has almost no effect on its resistance. Its Q will be low enough at maximum inductance setting on a shortwave variometer. Lower XL and don`t change the R. The effect on Q is obvious. I suspect the variometer was optimized for Q in the 3600 - 5000 MHz range. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |