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  #1   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about 40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error. I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?

[1] A not uncommon journalistic contrivance nowadays; seems like these
authors just uncan stop not undoing this, and have unremembered to not
undo it the old fashioned way, and just say "common".

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  #2   Report Post  
Tim Williams
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover"" wrote
in message ...
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.


I was thinking a solenoid type...obviously you cracked it in half then?

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.


Ok.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about 40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be exactly
as they should be.


If you snapped the core back together, the existing winding and your test
winding would share a good proportion of the flux, as a result it will act
as a good transformer. However, being open to the air, much of the field
lines will be lost and you'll have a less than unity coupling coefficient.
Depending on the frequency, size and turns you may also encounter trouble
measuring it accurately due to parasitic capacitance in the windings.

I guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or covered
up.


This would be much better because you can get a few turns around the core
evenly in most cases. Donno about coupling but I imagine it's worse farther
from the core, even though the turns still circle it fully.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?


No, but it's a good idea if you can work around the coupling problems.
If only I had an L meter...

Tim

--
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of a rib, which, quite honestly, is a cheaper cut of meat." - toon
Website: http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms


  #3   Report Post  
John Larkin
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On Fri, 4 Jun 2004 19:54:21 -0700, "Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the
Dark Remover\"" wrote:

Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about 40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error. I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?

[1] A not uncommon journalistic contrivance nowadays; seems like these
authors just uncan stop not undoing this, and have unremembered to not
undo it the old fashioned way, and just say "common".


That is a not-unworthy observation.

Given a common ferrite bobbin type inductor, you could apply a
reasonably high frequency sinewave to the inductor, then wind a
single-turn (or a few, maybe) sense winding over the existing winding,
then measure the voltage ratio (excitation/sense) to get the turns
ratio. This only works if the sense winding encompasses as much flux
as the main winding, which won't be entirely true for a bobbin with
air return path. It gets better if you can artificially close the gap
between the ends of the bobbin with some sort of ferrite or
transformer steel path, sort of a high-permeability c-clamp.

Hmmm... maybe it's better to apply an external magnetic field to the
thing to get the ratio. That may make it more likely that the sense
coil encompasses the same flux as the main coil. Probably so.

For a torroid of non-silly permeability, this voltage ratio thing just
works.

John

  #4   Report Post  
Rich Grise
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover"" wrote
in message
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.


Wind turns around it, as you've said. Then drive the unknown core
with some voltage at a high enough frequency that it can actually
develop some voltage (so you can measure it); detect and measure
the voltage at the secondary, (I say detect - depending on what
freq. you use. I don't know the freq. response of a typical DVM),
and the ratio is the ratio. :-)

It shouldn't matter if it's a little lossy, because the turns
ratio is the turns ratio, and the DVM is hi-impedance, right?

Cheers!
Rich


  #5   Report Post  
John Larkin
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 03:16:28 GMT, "Rich Grise"
wrote:


It shouldn't matter if it's a little lossy, because the turns
ratio is the turns ratio,


As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.

John



  #6   Report Post  
Jan Panteltje
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On a sunny day (Sat, 05 Jun 2004 08:55:27 -0700) it happened John Larkin
wrote in
:

On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 03:16:28 GMT, "Rich Grise"
wrote:


It shouldn't matter if it's a little lossy, because the turns
ratio is the turns ratio,


As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.

John

pepepepepepepedantic
  #7   Report Post  
Rich Grise
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message
s.com...
On a sunny day (Sat, 05 Jun 2004 08:55:27 -0700) it happened John Larkin
wrote in
:

On Sat, 05 Jun 2004 03:16:28 GMT, "Rich Grise"
wrote:


It shouldn't matter if it's a little lossy, because the turns
ratio is the turns ratio,


As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.

John

pepepepepepepedantic


Well, it does make a difference.

I learned something today! Guess I can go back to bed. :-)

Cheers!
Rich


  #8   Report Post  
Phil Allison
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"Watson A.Name -in message

Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.



** One you have got that far you have constructed a transformer. Drive some
AC current into the original inductor's winding ( from an audio generator or
similar) and measure the AC voltage on it and on the overwind you created.

The turns ratio and the (unloaded) voltage ratio you measure are in exact
proportion.

The same method can be used to discover the number of turns in the windings
of a toroidal transformer or any transformer where you can place a small
overwind.



............. Phil







  #9   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"Phil Allison" wrote in message
...

"Watson A.Name -in message

Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire

are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of

the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know

what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is

small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that

it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so

that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.



** One you have got that far you have constructed a transformer.

Drive some
AC current into the original inductor's winding ( from an audio

generator or
similar) and measure the AC voltage on it and on the overwind you

created.

The turns ratio and the (unloaded) voltage ratio you measure are in

exact
proportion.

The same method can be used to discover the number of turns in the

windings
of a toroidal transformer or any transformer where you can place a

small
overwind.


After reading several followups so far, I'm getting the picture that it
would be easier to measure the voltage ratio. Rich suggested using a
DVM, but IIRC their AC bandwidth is limited, and drops off above a few
kHz or so. Rectifying the AC is an alternativce, but then it's not
accurate if the .6V diode drop is a considerable part of the rectified
DCV. An O'Scope seems the best way to measure, if it can be calibrated.
Actually, come to think of it, all that's needed is the ratio, not the
absolute V values.

One thing that I had in mind when I originated this idea was that, say
for instance, I'm measuring a trigger transformer for a xenon tube,
where the number of turns could be thousands. If I wound a few tens of
turns on it, the V ratio could be a hundred or more. That might be a
bit more difficult to measure than the inductance.

Thanks to all for the thoughtful responses. I'm going to have to try a
few experiments to see how these work.

............ Phil



  #10   Report Post  
Tom Bruhns
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

As has been pointed out in other postings to the thread, the
coefficient of coupling is important. Whatever flux from the primary
(driven winding) does not couple to the secondary will not induce
voltage in the secondary, and the measured turns ratio will be low as
a result. However, by measuring the inductance of the primary when
the secondary is open and again when it is shorted, and doing the same
with the secondary, you can find the leakage inductances and therefore
the coefficient of coupling, fairly accurately. (The second
measurement is really a check for consistency.) No need for xrays.
You could further improve the accuracy, I suppose, by including a
resistance value for each winding; ideally it would be the AC
resistance at the operating frequency. It will probably make for
easier calculations if you load the secondary very lightly for the
measurement.

But I'm still not seeing any need to know the number of turns, other
than for idle curosity. "I need to know because I want to"??

Cheers,
Tom

"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\"" wrote in message ...
....
After reading several followups so far, I'm getting the picture that it
would be easier to measure the voltage ratio. Rich suggested using a
DVM, but IIRC their AC bandwidth is limited, and drops off above a few
kHz or so. Rectifying the AC is an alternativce, but then it's not
accurate if the .6V diode drop is a considerable part of the rectified
DCV. An O'Scope seems the best way to measure, if it can be calibrated.
Actually, come to think of it, all that's needed is the ratio, not the
absolute V values.

One thing that I had in mind when I originated this idea was that, say
for instance, I'm measuring a trigger transformer for a xenon tube,
where the number of turns could be thousands. If I wound a few tens of
turns on it, the V ratio could be a hundred or more. That might be a
bit more difficult to measure than the inductance.

Thanks to all for the thoughtful responses. I'm going to have to try a
few experiments to see how these work.

............ Phil



  #11   Report Post  
Tony Williams
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

In article ,
Tom Bruhns wrote:
As has been pointed out in other postings to the thread, the
coefficient of coupling is important. Whatever flux from the
primary (driven winding) does not couple to the secondary will
not induce voltage in the secondary, and the measured turns ratio
will be low as a result. However, by measuring the inductance of
the primary when the secondary is open and again when it is
shorted, and doing the same with the secondary, you can find the
leakage inductances and therefore the coefficient of coupling,
fairly accurately.


That method of measuring the leakage inductance
(by shorting windings) gives a hint towards a
possible experimental method.... Short the sec
with an ammeter and treat the thing as a CT.

After all, CT's have a current-ratio that is quite
close to the turns-ratio, even though the coupling
can be poor (as in a CT with a bar primary). This
is because the leakage inductance (and R-primary)
can be regarded as being in series with a constant
current stimulus source. The major source of error
is then the sideways current due to the shunt loss.

So perhaps do a short-circuit current-ratio test,
then measure the sideways shunt-current taken by
just the primary, at the same equivalent voltage.

--
Tony Williams.
  #12   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"Tony Williams" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Tom Bruhns wrote:
As has been pointed out in other postings to the thread, the
coefficient of coupling is important. Whatever flux from the
primary (driven winding) does not couple to the secondary will
not induce voltage in the secondary, and the measured turns ratio
will be low as a result. However, by measuring the inductance of
the primary when the secondary is open and again when it is
shorted, and doing the same with the secondary, you can find the
leakage inductances and therefore the coefficient of coupling,
fairly accurately.


That method of measuring the leakage inductance
(by shorting windings) gives a hint towards a
possible experimental method.... Short the sec
with an ammeter and treat the thing as a CT.

After all, CT's have a current-ratio that is quite
close to the turns-ratio, even though the coupling
can be poor (as in a CT with a bar primary). This
is because the leakage inductance (and R-primary)
can be regarded as being in series with a constant
current stimulus source. The major source of error
is then the sideways current due to the shunt loss.

So perhaps do a short-circuit current-ratio test,
then measure the sideways shunt-current taken by
just the primary, at the same equivalent voltage.


So it first was voltage ratio, and now current ratio.

How do I measure short circuit current? Is an AC
milliammeter a good enough short circuit to make the
measurement? It will have some resistance and hence
some voltage drop. That's not a true short circuit.

--
Tony Williams.



  #13   Report Post  
Tom Bruhns
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

Subtitle: flies in the ointment.

Perhaps it's not possible to determine the turns ratio in the way I've
been suggesting, unless the coupling is very close to unity (in which
case there's no need to measure leakage inductances).

Consider the following coils/scenarios. Make three bobbins, all the
same dimensions. Make two of them from some nice dielectric like
Teflon or polystyrene. Make the third from a low-loss ferrite. Put
identical windings on all three. I'll assume here that the
permeability of the ferrite and the shape of the bobbin and winding
result in a coil with a self-inductance exactly four times that of the
other two coils. Neglect resistance and parasitic capacitance.

Now position the two "air-core" coils so the coefficient of coupling
is 0.5. Excite one with 1V. Measure the voltage induced in the
second without loading it: I believe it will be 0.5V.

Replace the second coil with the one wound on the ferrite bobbin, and
adjust for the same k=0.5. Now what voltage do you measure in that
coil? I believe it will be 1.0V, even though the turns ratio is the
same.

Sound right this time?

Cheers,
Tom




(Tom Bruhns) wrote in message om...
As has been pointed out in other postings to the thread, the
coefficient of coupling is important. Whatever flux from the primary
(driven winding) does not couple to the secondary will not induce
voltage in the secondary, and the measured turns ratio will be low as
a result. However, by measuring the inductance of the primary when
the secondary is open and again when it is shorted, and doing the same
with the secondary, you can find the leakage inductances and therefore
the coefficient of coupling, fairly accurately. (The second
measurement is really a check for consistency.) No need for xrays.
You could further improve the accuracy, I suppose, by including a
resistance value for each winding; ideally it would be the AC
resistance at the operating frequency. It will probably make for
easier calculations if you load the secondary very lightly for the
measurement.

....
  #14   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor



"Tom Bruhns" wrote in message
m...
As has been pointed out in other postings to the thread, the
coefficient of coupling is important. Whatever flux from the primary
(driven winding) does not couple to the secondary will not induce
voltage in the secondary, and the measured turns ratio will be low as
a result. However, by measuring the inductance of the primary when
the secondary is open and again when it is shorted, and doing the same
with the secondary, you can find the leakage inductances and therefore
the coefficient of coupling, fairly accurately. (The second
measurement is really a check for consistency.) No need for xrays.
You could further improve the accuracy, I suppose, by including a
resistance value for each winding; ideally it would be the AC
resistance at the operating frequency. It will probably make for
easier calculations if you load the secondary very lightly for the
measurement.

But I'm still not seeing any need to know the number of turns, other
than for idle curosity. "I need to know because I want to"??


If I want to make a reasonable facsimile of the coil, I have to know a
bit about it, like what kind of ferrite material and how many turns it
has. I thought that getting the number of tuens would be alot of help
with this.

Cheers,
Tom

"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\""

wrote in message
...
...
After reading several followups so far, I'm getting the picture that

it
would be easier to measure the voltage ratio. Rich suggested using

a
DVM, but IIRC their AC bandwidth is limited, and drops off above a

few
kHz or so. Rectifying the AC is an alternativce, but then it's not
accurate if the .6V diode drop is a considerable part of the

rectified
DCV. An O'Scope seems the best way to measure, if it can be

calibrated.
Actually, come to think of it, all that's needed is the ratio, not

the
absolute V values.

One thing that I had in mind when I originated this idea was that,

say
for instance, I'm measuring a trigger transformer for a xenon tube,
where the number of turns could be thousands. If I wound a few tens

of
turns on it, the V ratio could be a hundred or more. That might be

a
bit more difficult to measure than the inductance.

Thanks to all for the thoughtful responses. I'm going to have to

try a
few experiments to see how these work.

............ Phil



  #15   Report Post  
Tom Bruhns
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\"" wrote in message ...
"Tom Bruhns" wrote in message
m...

....
But I'm still not seeing any need to know the number of turns, other
than for idle curosity. "I need to know because I want to"??


If I want to make a reasonable facsimile of the coil, I have to know a
bit about it, like what kind of ferrite material and how many turns it
has. I thought that getting the number of tuens would be alot of help
with this.


So what's wrong with just measuring the electrical properties of the
coil, if you really can't take it apart? You can measure inductance
as a function of frequency, and as a function of bias current, and you
can measure loss (or Q or ESR). It's also worthwhile knowing from the
circuit in which the inductor is used what the important
characteristics a that is, from the circuit, you should be able to
specify the inductor.

Certainly you should be able to estimate the number of turns through
transformer turns ratio, in spite of the possible errors, because you
should be able to get pretty good coupling between the coils. If K=1
there can be no difference in inductance between two coils with the
same number of turns. As Reg and others have pointed out, though, the
inductance is determined more by the air gap than by the core
permeability, so knowing the approximate number of turns may not tell
you as much about the core material as you had hoped.

Cheers,
Tom


  #16   Report Post  
John Larkin
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On Sat, 5 Jun 2004 13:17:08 +1000, "Phil Allison"
wrote:


** One you have got that far you have constructed a transformer. Drive some
AC current into the original inductor's winding ( from an audio generator or
similar) and measure the AC voltage on it and on the overwind you created.

The turns ratio and the (unloaded) voltage ratio you measure are in exact
proportion.


As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.


John


  #17   Report Post  
Phil Allison
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"John Larkin"
On "Phil Allison"



** One you have got that far you have constructed a transformer. Drive

some
AC current into the original inductor's winding ( from an audio generator

or
similar) and measure the AC voltage on it and on the overwind you

created.

The turns ratio and the (unloaded) voltage ratio you measure are in exact
proportion.


As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.


** That is not a very helpful remark.

The suggestion was that the overwind be around the existing coil of the
inductor * PLUS * there is no load on the overwind so leakage inductance
is irrelevant.



................ Phil




  #18   Report Post  
John Larkin
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On Sun, 6 Jun 2004 13:23:28 +1000, "Phil Allison"
wrote:

The turns ratio and the (unloaded) voltage ratio you measure are in exact
proportion.


As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.


** That is not a very helpful remark.


But it's true. There's not a lot of sense pretending you can measure
something if you can't.

The suggestion was that the overwind be around the existing coil of the
inductor * PLUS * there is no load on the overwind so leakage inductance
is irrelevant.


Leakage inductance means exactly that the same flux does *not* thread
all turns. So the unloaded voltage induced into the sense winding will
be less volts/turn than the main coil. This is the likely situation
for a drum core with a large air return path; some of the return flux
will sneak back *inside* the sense coil.

As the sense winding gets bigger in diameter, its signal level tends
to zero, loaded or not.

John


  #19   Report Post  
Phil Allison
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"John Larkin"
"Phil Allison"

The turns ratio and the (unloaded) voltage ratio you measure are in

exact
proportion.

As long as the same flux traverses all the turns.

** That is not a very helpful remark.


But it's true.



** It is *unhelpful* because it is so damn ambiguous.


There's not a lot of sense pretending you can measure
something if you can't.


** It makes less sense to scorn a perfectly practical test method.


The suggestion was that the overwind be around the existing coil of the
inductor * PLUS * there is no load on the overwind so leakage

inductance
is irrelevant.



Leakage inductance means exactly that the same flux does *not* thread
all turns. So the unloaded voltage induced into the sense winding will
be less volts/turn than the main coil. This is the likely situation
for a drum core with a large air return path; some of the return flux
will sneak back *inside* the sense coil.



** The overwind is to be around the existing coil, wound in parallel and on
top of it, touching it - is that hard to comprehend ?

A further ( rather obvious) condition is that the inductor coil current for
the test be low enough to not generate a significant voltage drop across the
coil's resistance - or you calculate that drop and take it into account.


As the sense winding gets bigger in diameter, its signal level tends
to zero, loaded or not.



** I just took a small mains toroidal ( 30VA) and with the primary
energised at 230 volts passed a one turn loop through the core and measured
0.102 volts rms across the ends. The loop could be made as open as you
liked or tight wrapped as you liked with NO change in the measured voltage.

The primary magnetising current was only 1.5 mA and the primary resistance
was 94 ohms - so a negligible primary drop of 140 mV.

So I make the primary turns to be 2255 ( +/- the AC voltmeter's 0.3 %
error, or about 7 turns)



............. Phil


  #20   Report Post  
Rich Grise
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover"" wrote
in message

In fact, I'm willing to bet real money that if you just do the turns
ratio by volts, that you'll get an integer answer. Or 1/integer,
don't be a smartass. ;-) I'll bet $100.00 it's within +- 20% of
the nearest integer (or reciprocal, if you're doing it upside
down), $10.00 that it's with +-10%, $5.00 for +- 5%,
and if it's within 1%, we should both win. :-)

Cheers!
Rich




  #21   Report Post  
Tom Bruhns
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

So my first obvious question is, why would you care? If you want to
duplicate the inductor, you already know the inductance, and you can
measure saturation effects and even loss, with some ingenuity.

But playing along with your request, if you can wind turns around the
existing coil, you also have made a transformer. To the extent the
two windings share a common magnetic field, they will be coupled. You
can, in fact, measure the leakage inductances and come up with quite a
good model, and I suppose from that you can deduce the number of turns
fairly accurately, especially if the coupling is good (and the leakage
inductance small compared with the coupled inductance) as it would be
with a ferrite toroid or a pot core or such.

Cheers,
Tom

"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\"" wrote in message ...
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about 40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error. I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?

[1] A not uncommon journalistic contrivance nowadays; seems like these
authors just uncan stop not undoing this, and have unremembered to not
undo it the old fashioned way, and just say "common".

--
@@F@r@o@m@@O@r@a@n@g@e@@C@o@u@n@t@y@,@@C@a@l@,@@w@ h@e@r@e@@
###Got a Question about ELECTRONICS? Check HERE First:###
http://users.pandora.be/educypedia/e...s/databank.htm
My email address is whitelisted. *All* email sent to it
goes directly to the trash unless you add NOSPAM in the
Subject: line with other stuff. alondra101 at hotmail.com
Don't be ripped off by the big book dealers. Go to the URL
that will give you a choice and save you money(up to half).
http://www.everybookstore.com You'll be glad you did!
Just when you thought you had all this figured out, the gov't
changed it: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
@@t@h@e@@a@f@f@l@u@e@n@t@@m@e@e@t@@t@h@e@@E@f@f@l@ u@e@n@t@@

  #22   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Tom Bruhns" wrote in message
m...
So my first obvious question is, why would you care? If you want to
duplicate the inductor, you already know the inductance, and you can
measure saturation effects and even loss, with some ingenuity.


I could have two inductors that look the same on their outside, but have
radically different inductance values. I could have two inductors that
are of the same inductance but have radically different core material
and size.

I'm just trying to get some idea of what makes up the inductor. Turns
of wire is just one of them. Another is what kind of core material is
used. I think that if I know the turns, it will give some idea of the
core material.

[snip]
Cheers,
Tom

"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\""

wrote in message
...
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire

are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of

the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know

what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is

small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that

it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so

that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the

original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about

40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be

exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if

any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error.

I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to

loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or

covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?

[1] A not uncommon journalistic contrivance nowadays; seems like

these
authors just uncan stop not undoing this, and have unremembered to

not
undo it the old fashioned way, and just say "common".

--
@@F@r@o@m@@O@r@a@n@g@e@@C@o@u@n@t@y@,@@C@a@l@,@@w@ h@e@r@e@@
###Got a Question about ELECTRONICS? Check HERE First:###
http://users.pandora.be/educypedia/e...s/databank.htm
My email address is whitelisted. *All* email sent to it
goes directly to the trash unless you add NOSPAM in the
Subject: line with other stuff. alondra101 at hotmail.com
Don't be ripped off by the big book dealers. Go to the URL
that will give you a choice and save you money(up to half).
http://www.everybookstore.com You'll be glad you did!
Just when you thought you had all this figured out, the gov't
changed it: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
@@t@h@e@@a@f@f@l@u@e@n@t@@m@e@e@t@@t@h@e@@E@f@f@l@ u@e@n@t@@



  #23   Report Post  
Terry Given
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover"" wrote
in message ...
"Tom Bruhns" wrote in message
m...
So my first obvious question is, why would you care? If you want to
duplicate the inductor, you already know the inductance, and you can
measure saturation effects and even loss, with some ingenuity.


I could have two inductors that look the same on their outside, but have
radically different inductance values. I could have two inductors that
are of the same inductance but have radically different core material
and size.


if the core has a large air gap ( 1mm), inductance is governed pretty much
by the air gap, and is pretty much independant of the core material.


I'm just trying to get some idea of what makes up the inductor. Turns
of wire is just one of them. Another is what kind of core material is
used. I think that if I know the turns, it will give some idea of the
core material.


cheers
Terry



  #24   Report Post  
Reg Edwards
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

If it is an air-cored inductor, calculate the number of turns from its
measured dimensions.

This won't work with a ferrite core because its material permeability is not
known. Although if the core is a simple rod the effective permeability is
roughly 25 regardless of material permeability.

With a high permeability core, 100 or more, effective permeability becomes a
function only of the very long 'air gap'. So inductance stops increasing
with increasing core material permeabilty.

But why would you want to know the number of turns if the coil is already
wound!
----
Reg.


  #25   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"Reg Edwards" wrote in message
...
If it is an air-cored inductor, calculate the number of turns from its
measured dimensions.

This won't work with a ferrite core because its material permeability

is not
known. Although if the core is a simple rod the effective permeability

is
roughly 25 regardless of material permeability.

With a high permeability core, 100 or more, effective permeability

becomes a
function only of the very long 'air gap'. So inductance stops

increasing
with increasing core material permeabilty.


Thanks for the interesting info. I would expect the core to be more of
a bobbin. But when it's covered, it's not always certain.

But why would you want to know the number of turns if the coil is

already
wound!


If I don't know the number of turns to begin with, do you expect me to
UNwind the coil to find the number of turns?

As I said, the coil is usually covered or potted in epoxy.

----
Reg.






  #26   Report Post  
Ben Bradley
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

In
sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci. electronics.components,alt.binaries.schematics.ele ctronic,
"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\""
wrote:


"Reg Edwards" wrote in message
...


But why would you want to know the number of turns if the coil is

already
wound!


If I don't know the number of turns to begin with, do you expect me to
UNwind the coil to find the number of turns?


You didn't answer the question. WHY do you want to find the number
of turns?

Okay, I'll answer for you. Reverse engineering. You want to make
one or more coils exactly like it. Of course, not only do you need the
number of turns (and the exact layout of the turns), you also need to
know exactly what the magnetic core material is - you can either ask
the manufacturer (of either the core or the coil), or measure its
physical size and test all its magnetic properties.

An inductor is one of the easier components to make in the "home
laboratory" and it's good to know you can look up formulas and stuff
(the ARRL handbook, at least older editions, has some useful coolbook
formulas for cylindrical coils) for those times when you need it ASAP
and can't wait for overnight delivery, but otherwise it's still
cheaper to buy than to build.

As I said, the coil is usually covered or potted in epoxy.

----
Reg.


-----
http://mindspring.com/~benbradley
  #27   Report Post  
Watson A.Name \Watt Sun - the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

Ben Bradley wrote:
In
sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci. electronics.components,alt.binaries.schematics.ele ctronic,
"Watson A.Name - \"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\""
wrote:



"Reg Edwards" wrote in message
...



But why would you want to know the number of turns if the coil is

already wound!
If I don't know the number of turns to begin with, do you expect me to
UNwind the coil to find the number of turns?



You didn't answer the question. WHY do you want to find the number
of turns?


Okay, I'll answer for you. Reverse engineering. You want to make
one or more coils exactly like it. Of course, not only do you need the


If I want to know what the core material is, then I need to know how
many turns it has, given a known inductance. But even if I decide to
buy rather than build one, I will have to determine the number of turns
so I can buy a coil like it, with approximately the same number of
turns. Like you said below, it might be cheaper to buy one.

number of turns (and the exact layout of the turns), you also need to
know exactly what the magnetic core material is - you can either ask
the manufacturer (of either the core or the coil), or measure its
physical size and test all its magnetic properties.


Can't ask the manufacturere if one doesn't know who made the coil to
begin with.

An inductor is one of the easier components to make in the "home
laboratory" and it's good to know you can look up formulas and stuff
(the ARRL handbook, at least older editions, has some useful coolbook
formulas for cylindrical coils) for those times when you need it ASAP
and can't wait for overnight delivery, but otherwise it's still
cheaper to buy than to build.




[snip]
  #28   Report Post  
Terry Given
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover"" wrote
in message ...

"Reg Edwards" wrote in message
...
If it is an air-cored inductor, calculate the number of turns from its
measured dimensions.

This won't work with a ferrite core because its material permeability

is not
known. Although if the core is a simple rod the effective permeability

is
roughly 25 regardless of material permeability.

With a high permeability core, 100 or more, effective permeability

becomes a
function only of the very long 'air gap'. So inductance stops

increasing
with increasing core material permeabilty.


Thanks for the interesting info. I would expect the core to be more of
a bobbin. But when it's covered, it's not always certain.

But why would you want to know the number of turns if the coil is

already
wound!


If I don't know the number of turns to begin with, do you expect me to
UNwind the coil to find the number of turns?

As I said, the coil is usually covered or potted in epoxy.


I design lots of magnetic devices. One of the first things I do with a
prototype transformer is dismantle it - I look at insulation, wire type,
winding pitch etc, AND I specifically count the number of turns (my
Leatherman has gutted hundreds of transformers I also measure coupling,
saturation, DC resistance, capacitance etc

If I had 2 of those bobbin core coils, I would just unwind the damn thing
and count the number of turns.

Ultimately, pay attention to John Larkin. A mate once had a 3-phase inductor
made (for a 600kW Butterworth filter that was hopeless - fringing flux
and leakage totally ruined the current distribution, making it glow red hot.
OTOH it made a great heater

Cheers
Terry





  #29   Report Post  
Watson A.Name \Watt Sun - the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

Terry Given wrote:
[snip]

I design lots of magnetic devices. One of the first things I do with a
prototype transformer is dismantle it - I look at insulation, wire type,
winding pitch etc, AND I specifically count the number of turns (my
Leatherman has gutted hundreds of transformers I also measure coupling,
saturation, DC resistance, capacitance etc


If I had 2 of those bobbin core coils, I would just unwind the damn thing
and count the number of turns.


Ultimately, pay attention to John Larkin. A mate once had a 3-phase inductor
made (for a 600kW Butterworth filter that was hopeless - fringing flux
and leakage totally ruined the current distribution, making it glow red hot.
OTOH it made a great heater


Is this a movie of that "heater"??? :-))) (Warning: 5 Megabyte .MPG)
http://205.243.100.155/frames/mpg/XfrmBlast1.mpg

Cheers
Terry

  #30   Report Post  
Watson A.Name \Watt Sun - the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

Watson A.Name "Watt Sun - the Dark Remover" wrote:

Terry Given wrote:
[snip]


I design lots of magnetic devices. One of the first things I do with a
prototype transformer is dismantle it - I look at insulation, wire type,
winding pitch etc, AND I specifically count the number of turns (my
Leatherman has gutted hundreds of transformers I also measure
coupling,
saturation, DC resistance, capacitance etc


If I had 2 of those bobbin core coils, I would just unwind the damn thing
and count the number of turns.



Ultimately, pay attention to John Larkin. A mate once had a 3-phase
inductor
made (for a 600kW Butterworth filter that was hopeless - fringing flux
and leakage totally ruined the current distribution, making it glow
red hot.
OTOH it made a great heater



Is this a movie of that "heater"??? :-))) (Warning: 5 Megabyte .MPG)
http://205.243.100.155/frames/mpg/XfrmBlast1.mpg


Ooh, COOL! He's got another even bigger one!! Warning: 1.5 MB .MPG
http://205.243.100.155/frames/mpg/500kV_Switch.mpg
See www.teslamania.com for the text associated with this video clip.

Cheers
Terry



  #31   Report Post  
Rich Grise
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Watson A.Name "Watt Sun - the Dark Remover"" wrote
in message ...
Terry Given wrote:
[snip]

Is this a movie of that "heater"??? :-))) (Warning: 5 Megabyte .MPG)
http://205.243.100.155/frames/mpg/XfrmBlast1.mpg


Well, they're Green. No PCBs there!

Cheers!
Rich


  #32   Report Post  
Jan Panteltje
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On a sunny day (Fri, 4 Jun 2004 19:54:21 -0700) it happened "Watson A.Name -
\"Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\"" wrote in
:

Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about 40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error. I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?

[1] A not uncommon journalistic contrivance nowadays; seems like these
authors just uncan stop not undoing this, and have unremembered to not
undo it the old fashioned way, and just say "common".

If you can add turns, put ten turns, and 400Hz 1V for example.
Measure voltage on original winding.
If 30V it is 10 x 30 = 300 turns.
JP
  #33   Report Post  
Bill Jeffrey
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

What am I missing here? If you know the inductance of the original
coil, there are formulas that will tell you the number of turns. Wind a
coil according to the formula, measure the inductance, and tweak the
number of turns to get as close as you need to be.

Bill
====================


Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover" wrote:
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about 40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error. I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?


  #34   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"Bill Jeffrey" wrote in message
...
What am I missing here? If you know the inductance of the original
coil, there are formulas that will tell you the number of turns. Wind

a
coil according to the formula, measure the inductance, and tweak the
number of turns to get as close as you need to be.

Bill
====================


Okay, I have two identical adjustable core coils, one with the slug all
the way in and the other all the way out. The Out one measures 100 uH
and the In one measures 180 uh. I put both into a box, each with
terminals to the outside, so that the physical coil can't be seen. Then
I give them to you along with the inductance of each, and you tell me
that, by your formulas, the Out one has a different number of turns than
the In one????


Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover" wrote:
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire

are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of

the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.

I have measured the inductor with an inductance meter, so I know

what
the inductance and other parameters are.

Suppose I take some wire, say roughly small if the inductor is

small,
and wind it around the inductor, over the existing windings so that

it's
within the magnetic field. I wind enough wire onto the inductor so

that
I get about 1/9, or 1/16 or 1/25 the inductance in the new coil.

Since the inductance is the square of the turns, I can say that if I
have wound 10 turns and the inductance is 1/16th that of the

original
coil, then the turns ratio is 4 to 1, so the original coil is about

40
turns.

Obviously the Real WOrld kicks in, and things may not always be

exactly
as they should be. But I haven't tried this, and I'm wondering if

any
other person has, and if it's a not unreasonably accurate[1] way to
guesstimate the turns, or if it is prone to a large amount of error.

I
guess it would also apply to a toroid if there is enough room to

loop
some wire thru the center hole, but this hole may be filled or

covered
up.

So has anyone played around with this contrivance?




  #35   Report Post  
Bill Jeffrey
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover" wrote:
"Bill Jeffrey" wrote in message
...

What am I missing here? If you know the inductance of the original
coil, there are formulas that will tell you the number of turns. Wind


a

coil according to the formula, measure the inductance, and tweak the
number of turns to get as close as you need to be.

Bill
====================



Okay, I have two identical adjustable core coils, one with the slug all
the way in and the other all the way out. The Out one measures 100 uH
and the In one measures 180 uh. I put both into a box, each with
terminals to the outside, so that the physical coil can't be seen. Then
I give them to you along with the inductance of each, and you tell me
that, by your formulas, the Out one has a different number of turns than
the In one????


No, I'm saying that you take the slug all the way out, and the bobbin
off the pot core/cup core, so you have an air core coil. Measure the
inductance and plug it into the formula. (You did say that it's wound
on a bobbin, which usually implies that you can get the bobbin off the
ferrite.)

There are many formulas for calculating inductance. All of them admit
to being approximations - but that's all you need. For example:

"For a coil of rectangular cross-section, of thickness t inches, length
l inches and mean diameter (average of inside and outside) d inches,
Hazletine's formula is L = 0.8d^2N^2 /(12d + 36l + 40t) uH"

Now if your entire coil, including the ferrite, is potted in epoxy, it
is a different situation. But I don't see that in any of your posts.

Bill



  #36   Report Post  
Rich Grise
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

"Bill Jeffrey" wrote in message
...

There are many formulas for calculating inductance. All of them admit
to being approximations - but that's all you need. For example:

"For a coil of rectangular cross-section, of thickness t inches, length
l inches and mean diameter (average of inside and outside) d inches,
Hazletine's formula is L = 0.8d^2N^2 /(12d + 36l + 40t) uH"

Now if your entire coil, including the ferrite, is potted in epoxy, it
is a different situation. But I don't see that in any of your posts.

What if you took the dimensions of the existing coil, and guesstimate
down for winding cross-section because of the epoxy (I'm envisioning
a bobbin-shaped winding potted so you have a torus), plug in the
measured inductance, and it should give you _something_ !

Cheers!
Rich


  #37   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
Posts: n/a
Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor



"Bill Jeffrey" wrote in message
...
Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover" wrote:
"Bill Jeffrey" wrote in message
...

What am I missing here? If you know the inductance of the original
coil, there are formulas that will tell you the number of turns.

Wind

a

coil according to the formula, measure the inductance, and tweak the
number of turns to get as close as you need to be.

Bill
====================



Okay, I have two identical adjustable core coils, one with the slug

all
the way in and the other all the way out. The Out one measures 100

uH
and the In one measures 180 uh. I put both into a box, each with
terminals to the outside, so that the physical coil can't be seen.

Then
I give them to you along with the inductance of each, and you tell

me
that, by your formulas, the Out one has a different number of turns

than
the In one????


No, I'm saying that you take the slug all the way out, and the bobbin
off the pot core/cup core, so you have an air core coil. Measure the
inductance and plug it into the formula. (You did say that it's wound
on a bobbin, which usually implies that you can get the bobbin off the
ferrite.)

There are many formulas for calculating inductance. All of them admit
to being approximations - but that's all you need. For example:

"For a coil of rectangular cross-section, of thickness t inches,

length
l inches and mean diameter (average of inside and outside) d inches,
Hazletine's formula is L = 0.8d^2N^2 /(12d + 36l + 40t) uH"

Now if your entire coil, including the ferrite, is potted in epoxy, it
is a different situation. But I don't see that in any of your posts.


Thanks for the info.

I guess I didn't say it outright, but I meant that the core was a bobbin
made of ferrite, so it can't be removed. And I did say that it could be
a toroid which is the same situation. Also, I didn't mention it but I
thought this could also be applied to a winding on a solenoid or motor.
In any case, removing the core from a bobbin in my experience is usually
destructive, or else the core won't go back in without having a major
problem, such as not fitting properly and hence the inductance won't be
the same as the original coil. This is because most ferrite bobbins
I've seen are glued to the core with epoxy or similar, and are a real
bitch to remove. So to me, that's not practical. Like someone
mentioned, it would be just as practical to cut the coil and count the
turns.



Bill



  #38   Report Post  
ånønÿmøu§
 
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Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

One way might be to in-case the coil in epoxy resin and saw it in half and simply count the windings.
  #39   Report Post  
Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\
 
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Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor



"ånønÿmøu§" wrote in message
...
One way might be to in-case the coil in epoxy resin and saw it in half

and simply count the windings.

Well, yeah, if you don't mind destroying the coil.

I worked for a guy who paid quite a bit of money to buy a competitor's
filter so he could reverse engineer it and get his product to do the
same thing. So he took it to a friends of his, who happened to be a
dentist. He and the dentist put it on the X-Ray machine and took a
picture of it, and found that the potted filter was just a few pieces of
coax cut off at the right wavelength to eliminate the transmitter's
spurious outputs.

I could X-ray this, too; I don't want to destroy it. And it would be
extremely difficult to count the number of turns by your method if the
wire was 32 gauge or finer.



  #40   Report Post  
normanstrong
 
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Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor


"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover""
wrote in message ...
Suppose that I have an inductor that's covered with epoxy or similar
that prevents me from seeing or finding out how many turns of wire

are
on the core. The core is open, so that it's uncovered and most of

the
magnetic field is outside outside of the inductor. Obviously it's a
bobbin type core.


The voltage ratio of a transformer is the same as the turns ratio.
Therefore, wind ten turns around the inductor and measure the voltage
at the output when a known voltage is applied to the inductor.

Norm Strong




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