Slack in coils

Thread Starter

HMartins

Joined May 10, 2011
23
Hi:

choke-ringkern-electromagnetic-coil-microhenry-inductor-png-favpng-Jwe7xP42ifWZrPQiN5FNPrgNG-2.jpg

Using ferrite profiles, how problematic can be the coil to ferrite slack in the cylindrical part of the toroid?

Thanks
Martins
 

Delta Prime

Joined Nov 15, 2019
1,311
A toroid has higher permeability than air core coils, which means you need fewer windings. You can also build them with higher Q than air core coils.
sliding the turns close together or farther apart will have SOME effect, but much much less than you would have on an air wound core. A toroid core will give you more inductance stability. Like Mister nsaspook said in your example, don't worry about it.
 

MisterBill2

Joined Jan 23, 2018
27,508
A toroid has higher permeability than air core coils, which means you need fewer windings. You can also build them with higher Q than air core coils.
sliding the turns close together or farther apart will have SOME effect, but much much less than you would have on an air wound core. A toroid core will give you more inductance stability. Like Mister nsaspook said in your example, don't worry about it.
With good test equiipment you may be able to measure a bit of difference, and if you have a tuned circuit for an oscillator at 3.50 megahertz you may be able to shift the frequency 100hz or so. If that matters then an application of coil glue will keep the turns in place. 100Hz/3500,000Hz is a very small percentage of change.
 
Top