Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old January 15th 05, 06:23 PM
Richard Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 15 Jan 2005 18:01:14 -0000, "Brian Reay"
wrote:

doing something for fun is no excuse not to do it well.


Hi OM,

The Calvinists left Britain to form the Puritans in the new world more
than 300 years ago (of course, many stayed behind to sulk during the
Restoration). Did you miss the boat?

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC
  #2   Report Post  
Old January 15th 05, 08:04 PM
Jock.
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 15 Jan 2005 09:31:11 -0800, "CW" wrote:

Did you notice the word "amature" in the newsgroup title? You might want to
consult a dictionary for the definition of that word.


Isn't in my dictionary.


Jock.

--

"The graveyards are full of indispensable men."
- Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970)
  #3   Report Post  
Old January 16th 05, 09:15 PM
CW
 
Posts: n/a
Default

You have a defective dictionary.

"Jock." wrote in message
...
On Sat, 15 Jan 2005 09:31:11 -0800, "CW" wrote:

Did you notice the word "amature" in the newsgroup title? You might want

to
consult a dictionary for the definition of that word.


Isn't in my dictionary.


Jock.

--

"The graveyards are full of indispensable men."
- Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970)



  #4   Report Post  
Old January 16th 05, 01:59 PM
Airy R.Bean
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Brian Reay" wrote in message
...
The CD idea falls flat as, while they may be cheap, the amount of

machining
'saved' is mininmal. I suppose if you are totally strapped for cash, out

of
work and with time on your hands, they may offer some advantage, but you
end up with a 'product' of inferior quality. Engineers who are driven by
such a penny pinching approach usually end up bankrupting their company as
their products are poor.



  #5   Report Post  
Old January 13th 05, 06:50 PM
Nimrod
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Airy R.Bean" wrote in message
...
I wonder if there is any mileage to be had from adapting
the numerous junk-mail CD's as the vanes of ATU
capacitors?


These would be the CDs returned with your defective, over priced, operating
system on them?





  #6   Report Post  
Old January 13th 05, 08:48 PM
Len Over 21
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article , "Airy R.Bean"
writes:

I wonder if there is any mileage to be had from adapting
the numerous junk-mail CD's as the vanes of ATU
capacitors?


Good grief...now there are "Technical TROLLS" from the person
wanting amateurs to get into the vacuum valve fabrication. :-)

1. We already have a form that is circular (no waste) and
with an accurately-positioned central hole.


Goodie...now you can make a 360 degree variable capacitor
with an extemely low minimum-to-maximum capacitance
ratio.

2. There is a metallic film sandwiched between the plastic.


Not really. You can read all about it in free downloads from
the Philips people who developed the recording system.

If it were really conductive, you could measure it directly with
a simple Ohmmeter. [not exactly rocket science, old boy]

3. Is this film to thin to stand up to the RF currents that
will spread out across it when charging & discharging?


First you find out what you think is a "metallic film," then you
can conjecture all you want. Hint: What you see on plastic
is not necessarily "metal."

4. How would we make metallic contact to the film without
destroying the film at the point of contact?


Use metal-free solder? :-)

5. Does anybody know the type of metal making up the film, i.e.,
can we solder to it?


Do you have a soldering iron? Can you not use it?

Or are those FREE, no-cost-to-you CDs so valuable that you
cannot do a few-minutes-of-your-time experiment on your own?

6. Is the plastic of a suitable quality? Will it arc-through?


Do you have the smarts to use a power supply to rig up a test to
prove this for everyone? Or is everything you have tied up in the
proposed vacuum-valve production line you've talked about?

========

Those free CDs that many receive have some redeeming features:
They can be coasters for placing drinking vessels on; they can be
"frisbees" for use in playing with a dog; they can make decorative
wind chimes to hang on a porch of those who don't like the sound
of wind chimes. If Paul Bunyan were alive today he might like to
use them as Christmas tree decorations. Other than that and
their excellent use as a time-stable data storage medium,
those left-over CDs are rather useless.

It would be nice if folks in here would share ACTUAL data and
information, not propose a lot of fantasy ideas.

CD blanks are nicely circular and MIGHT make some kind of edge-
friction-drive dial but the center (or centre) hole is non-standard at
about 7/16 inch diameter (1.11 cm). Yes, a moderate machine
shop could make a shaft adapter for it...but that same machine shop
could make a much-superior edge-drive dial out of metal in only
slightly more time. That same machine shop could also turn out
capacitor plates for a variable, the shafts for same, end bearings,
etc. Several firms on both sides of the Pond have done that for
over half a century. [Jackson Brothers in the UK, James Millen
et al in the USA]

Rather than get all fired-up in pipedreaming on the keyboard, try
searching for a "dielectric capacitor" on the Internet. There are
several hobbyist sites which explain how they can be made using
thin polymer sheet plates rotating between two metal plates.
Maximum chapacity change ratio is limited to the dielectric
constant of the polymer (that's "plastic" to you non-chemical
types). Withstanding voltage can be figured from dimensions
and plate spacings using pencil and paper (crayon and cardboard
can be used but not recommended).

Presuming that "ATU" is an acronym for Automatic Tuning Unit,
how in the silly blue heck are you going to make it "automatic"
presuming someone else already solves "your" questions? The
servotuning system needs far more thinking attention than gazing
at used CDs pondering the whichness of the what about them.

Hint: There's already been some very nice hobbyist work done
in regard to ATUs with much on the servotuning system (at least
one made from scratch) plus the sensing-detection system to
get the servotuning going in the desired "automatic" direction.
Another Hint: The detection-sensing was solved in 1955 by a
"Yank" surnamed Bruene who was then working at Collins Radio.
[that's in the middle of the USA, in the state of Iowa]

An even better ATU uses a microcontroller chip plus a Bruene
Detector, and some latching relays to switch stepped inductors
and capacitors in/out in a two-element L-C network. Both L and
C step in the binary progression of 1-2-4-8-16-... sequence. That
sort of network and its micro are at the heart of at least three
commercial ATUs built and sold in the USA. It has the advantage
of tuning memory, can return to the same setting by actually
measuring the carrier's approximate operating frequency! In the
U.S. Army such an ATU in incorporated in the backpack HF
transceiver AN/PRC-104 (design by Hughes Aircraft Ground
Systems, in operational use for nearly two decades). On the
ARRL website you can find a reprint of a nice digital ATU
construction article that used to be available frree for download
but that may have been changed to members-only availability.
At the Stoner Goral Company (SGC) website is much interesting
information on their ready-built ATUs, installation and use on HF,
plus operating manuals (those were free downloads).

www.sgc.com

Founders Don Stoner and Pierre Goral (both hams but sadly,
both SK now) developed the SG-2020, a very small 20 W, full-
frequency-range-on-HF SSB transceiver, back-pack size almost
as small as the PRC-104 (also 20 W PEP).

The step-variable tuning system seems very strange to those
accustomed to big handwheel-operated variable capacitors, but
that is quite versatile in that you can use readily-available fixed
(and sealed) capacitors and toroidal inductors. Toroids are easy
enough to make, much much easier than trying to shape CDs
into a semblance of capacitor dielectric blades. Toroids can be
potted or well coated with varnish, enough to withstand outdoor
environments in snow country or the tropics. Relays are
generally expensive but Omron makes some nice relatively
inexpensive relays (including latching types for built-in memory)
for the higher withstanding voltages found with 100 W RF at
50 Ohms with up to 20:1 VSWR. All the big electronic
distributors carry Omron products.


  #7   Report Post  
Old January 13th 05, 08:59 PM
Dave Platt
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article ,
Len Over 21 wrote:

2. There is a metallic film sandwiched between the plastic.


Not really. You can read all about it in free downloads from
the Philips people who developed the recording system.

If it were really conductive, you could measure it directly with
a simple Ohmmeter. [not exactly rocket science, old boy]


6. Is the plastic of a suitable quality? Will it arc-through?


Do you have the smarts to use a power supply to rig up a test to
prove this for everyone? Or is everything you have tied up in the
proposed vacuum-valve production line you've talked about?


An interesting experiment can be performed by placing a CD on top of a
mug filled with water, in an ordinary kitchen microwave, and then
nuking it for about 10 seconds. The resulting "light show" is most
impressive, but also lets out one heck of a stink.

The vaccum-deposited aluminum layer burns up very quickly, and the
spin-coated lacquer on top of it is also damaged quite easily.

The result makes me quite pessimistic that the aluminumization is
robust enough to allow a CD to be used as part of a variable-plate
capacitor in a transmatch, except perhaps at QRP levels.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
  #8   Report Post  
Old January 14th 05, 10:55 AM
Airy R.Bean
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I have never trolled in any NG.

"Len Over 21" wrote in message
...
In article , "Airy R.Bean"


writes:
I wonder if there is any mileage to be had from adapting
the numerous junk-mail CD's as the vanes of ATU
capacitors?

Good grief...now there are "Technical TROLLS" from the person
wanting amateurs to get into the vacuum valve fabrication. :-)



  #9   Report Post  
Old January 14th 05, 10:56 AM
Airy R.Bean
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Stupid boy. Perhaps it is you who is the troll?

"Len Over 21" wrote in message
...
In article , "Airy R.Bean"


writes:
1. We already have a form that is circular (no waste) and
with an accurately-positioned central hole.

Goodie...now you can make a 360 degree variable capacitor
with an extemely low minimum-to-maximum capacitance
ratio.



  #10   Report Post  
Old January 14th 05, 03:00 PM
J M Noeding
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 10:55:58 -0000, "Airy R.Bean"
wrote:

I have never trolled in any NG.


On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 09:29:46 -0000, "Airy R.Bean"
wrote:

Once again. Mr.Reay succeeds in scoring an own-goal


On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 10:56:47 -0000, "Airy R.Bean"
wrote:

Stupid boy. Perhaps it is you who is the troll?


Rather active CB-boy, but I am not convinced about his real interest
to participate in a technical amateur radio newsgroup


---
J. M. Noeding, LA8AK, N-4623 Kristiansand
http://home.online.no/~la8ak/c.htm


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
FS: 2000: 50V 7.5pF Ceramic Capacitors :: $ 16 SHIPPED Jerry Rakar Homebrew 0 February 5th 04 11:58 PM
FS: Lots of 500: 50V 22uF Electrolytic Capacitors :: $ 27 SHIPPED Jerry Rakar Homebrew 2 January 1st 04 12:46 AM
FS: Lots of 500: 50V 22uF Electrolytic Capacitors :: $ 27 SHIPPED Jerry Rakar Homebrew 0 December 31st 03 10:42 PM
Electrolytic coupling capacitors Jason Hsu Homebrew 4 November 18th 03 01:55 PM
Electrolytic coupling capacitors Jason Hsu Homebrew 0 November 17th 03 10:49 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:45 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017