Note:
This is a follow-up of a previous article,"Characterizing the Mini-Circuits ZFSC-4-3, ZFDC-20-3, ZFSC-4-1-BNC+ and ZFSC-2-1+ well below their designed frequency range" - link.
Comment:
"Rolling your own" splitter for LF through HF:
Unless you get the Mini-Circuits devices for cheap at a swap meet or via a surplus outlet, their cost may be a bit prohibitive for casual use in the shack. How about making your own?
Two-transformer splitter/combiner:
A common splitter consists of two cores: One to transform the impedance to half that of the characteristic impedance and a second to split the signal two ways as depicted in Figure 1. The inductance of L1 and L2 should be high enough to present a reactance of 3-10 times the system impedance at the lowest frequency.
For LF and HF use, this splitter is just "OK" - the loss being an extra 3dB at the high end of the spectrum: If preceded with amplification, this loss may be tolerable - but note that even the nominal 3dB loss of a 2-way splitter should be of concern at the higher HF bands as signals - and the natural noise floor - can be quite weak and additional loss can drop the receiver's noise floor below that, potentially causing the loss of reception of weaker signals.
Much of the high-frequency loss is due to the inter-winding capacitance. Experimentally, versions were constructed using wire with PTFE ("Teflon") insulation and comparing it with another with the same number of turns of the 30 AWG enamel and the losses for the PTFE wire version were 1.5-2dB lower - but fewer turns could be passed through the core and low-frequency response suffered.
Single-transformer splitter-combiner:
Another common splitter/combiner is the form depicted in Figure 3, using a single core - and potentially this can reduce compared with a device with two cores.
In this system the combined impedance of the secondaries is half that of the primary - and the primary should consists of 1.414 times (e.g. the square root of two) as many turns as each of the secondary windings.
Both a binocular and toroidal core were tried and better results were obtained with the FT50-75 core than the available BN43-202 binocular core - both because the higher permeability improved the low-end response and larger wire could be used for the toroid: Capacitance was reduced because the turns could be spread out over the torus rather than being overlaid as the case of the binocular core, and high-end losses were further-reduced by laying the turns of the secondary next to each other rather than the higher capacitance resulting from the two conductors being twisted.
The results of this work are visible in Figure 4. For this transformer, two parallel secondary "bifilar" windings consisting of 14 turns each were laid down using 24 AWG enamel wire with 20 turns of 24 AWG over the top. As can be seen, the results of the insertion loss are excellent: The insertion loss is below 3.6dB from 10 kHz to 60 MHz and the overlaid Smith chart shows the VSWR to be pretty well-behaved, never exceeding 1.5:1 over this range.
A four-way splitter:
I happened to have a need to take wide frequency range and split it four ways - specifically, to several KiwiSDR receivers, stand-alone web-based receivers capable of reception over the 5kHz-30MHz range - so I decided to construct a splitter using the configuration described above. To do this, I would need three splitters: A pair of splitters to feed the four outputs and one more splitter to feed the aforementioned two splitters: This splitter is depicted schematically in Figure 6:
* * *
This is a follow-up of a previous article,"Characterizing the Mini-Circuits ZFSC-4-3, ZFDC-20-3, ZFSC-4-1-BNC+ and ZFSC-2-1+ well below their designed frequency range" - link.
Stolen from ka7oei.blogspot.com
[End]
This is a follow-up of a previous article,"Characterizing the Mini-Circuits ZFSC-4-3, ZFDC-20-3, ZFSC-4-1-BNC+ and ZFSC-2-1+ well below their designed frequency range" - link.
Comment:
All of the devices described here could also be used to combine signals from multiple sources. Unless the signals being combined are "phase coherent"(e.g. from the same signal source) the insertion loss will be the same as that in splitter operation.
"Rolling your own" splitter for LF through HF:
Unless you get the Mini-Circuits devices for cheap at a swap meet or via a surplus outlet, their cost may be a bit prohibitive for casual use in the shack. How about making your own?
Two-transformer splitter/combiner:
A common splitter consists of two cores: One to transform the impedance to half that of the characteristic impedance and a second to split the signal two ways as depicted in Figure 1. The inductance of L1 and L2 should be high enough to present a reactance of 3-10 times the system impedance at the lowest frequency.
For LF and HF use, this splitter is just "OK" - the loss being an extra 3dB at the high end of the spectrum: If preceded with amplification, this loss may be tolerable - but note that even the nominal 3dB loss of a 2-way splitter should be of concern at the higher HF bands as signals - and the natural noise floor - can be quite weak and additional loss can drop the receiver's noise floor below that, potentially causing the loss of reception of weaker signals.
Much of the high-frequency loss is due to the inter-winding capacitance. Experimentally, versions were constructed using wire with PTFE ("Teflon") insulation and comparing it with another with the same number of turns of the 30 AWG enamel and the losses for the PTFE wire version were 1.5-2dB lower - but fewer turns could be passed through the core and low-frequency response suffered.
Single-transformer splitter-combiner:
Another common splitter/combiner is the form depicted in Figure 3, using a single core - and potentially this can reduce compared with a device with two cores.
In this system the combined impedance of the secondaries is half that of the primary - and the primary should consists of 1.414 times (e.g. the square root of two) as many turns as each of the secondary windings.
Figure 4: The insertion loss of the described two-way splitter using 24 AWG wire on an FT50-75 core: It is well below 4dB over the range of 10 kHz to 60 MHz. Click on the image for a larger version. |
The results of this work are visible in Figure 4. For this transformer, two parallel secondary "bifilar" windings consisting of 14 turns each were laid down using 24 AWG enamel wire with 20 turns of 24 AWG over the top. As can be seen, the results of the insertion loss are excellent: The insertion loss is below 3.6dB from 10 kHz to 60 MHz and the overlaid Smith chart shows the VSWR to be pretty well-behaved, never exceeding 1.5:1 over this range.
A four-way splitter:
I happened to have a need to take wide frequency range and split it four ways - specifically, to several KiwiSDR receivers, stand-alone web-based receivers capable of reception over the 5kHz-30MHz range - so I decided to construct a splitter using the configuration described above. To do this, I would need three splitters: A pair of splitters to feed the four outputs and one more splitter to feed the aforementioned two splitters: This splitter is depicted schematically in Figure 6:
This splitter consists of three of the two-way splitters connected as described: FT50-75 cores wound with 14 turns, each of two parallel 24 AWG conductors for the secondary overlaid with 20 turns of 24 AWG. During testing it was observed that the addition of capacitors "C" slightly reduced (by nearly 1 dB) the insertion loss at 30 MHz at the expense of increased loss (about 2dB) at 60 MHz - but because the target high-end limit was 30 MHz, this was considered to be acceptable.
The end result was an insertion loss (see Figure 7) of less than 7 dB from 20 kHz through 30 MHz, rising to 8 dB and 9.3 dB at 10 kHz and 60 MHz, respectively, being under 6.3dB between 50 kHz and 10 MHz. In testing port-to-port isolation, the worst case results were those obtained from the same transformer (e.g. T2 or T3) and this value was at least 15dB from 50 kHz to 30 MHz.
This four-way splitter was built into a small die-case box for mechanical rigidity and and electrical shielding. Inside the box, pieces of plastic tape were affixed to the bottom and the lid to eliminate the possibility of inadvertent shorting of connections to the case: Details of the mechanical construction may be see in Figure 8.
To reiterate: It was determined that with the number of turns required to obtain good response into the LF range (e.g. below 30 kHz) that the use of twisted bifilar windings was NOT indicated: Doing so resulted in excess loss (3-6dB) by the time one got to 30 MHz. As indicated, the use of thicker insulation (e.g. PTFE versus enamel) reduced this loss somewhat, but the best-results were obtained by simply laying the "bifilar" windings parallel to each other. In this case, 24 AWG enamel wire was used, a compromise between lower skin-effect losses and the ability to fit the required number of turns on the FT-50 core.
Conclusion:
To reiterate: It was determined that with the number of turns required to obtain good response into the LF range (e.g. below 30 kHz) that the use of twisted bifilar windings was NOT indicated: Doing so resulted in excess loss (3-6dB) by the time one got to 30 MHz. As indicated, the use of thicker insulation (e.g. PTFE versus enamel) reduced this loss somewhat, but the best-results were obtained by simply laying the "bifilar" windings parallel to each other. In this case, 24 AWG enamel wire was used, a compromise between lower skin-effect losses and the ability to fit the required number of turns on the FT-50 core.
Conclusion:
If one needs a very wide-range splitter for broadband receivers that cover from LF through HF - such as some modern "Direct Sampling" SDRs (e.g. the KiwiSDR) there are some commercially-available devices that may be found that will work well. If you are willing, a perfectly suitable device may be constructed using a minimal complement of components.
* * *
This is a follow-up of a previous article,"Characterizing the Mini-Circuits ZFSC-4-3, ZFDC-20-3, ZFSC-4-1-BNC+ and ZFSC-2-1+ well below their designed frequency range" - link.
Stolen from ka7oei.blogspot.com
[End]