On Wed,5/24/2017 9:39 AM, Bill Leonard N0CU wrote:
Two of the
main trade offs are bandwidth and choking impedance. The  highest choking BW
is usually obtain with an air core choke (coax looped with or without some
form like PVC). However, this approach is very high Q, which yields
relatively low R and narrow BW.

Bill,

This simple-minded analysis is WRONG because it fails to realize the fact that the choke is adding inductance to a part of the antenna (the transmission line as a common mode conductor). It is, in fact, no different from adding a loading coil to an antenna to resonate it! At some frequencies, that transmission line will look capacitive, and at those frequencies, the added inductance causes the line to resonate, INCREASING common mode current rather than reducing it.

Think about it -- how is this air core inductor different from a loading coil that we add to the base of a short vertical to resonate it? Using your logic, that loading coil ought to block the current, but we all know that it does not.

THIS fundamental principle is why air core chokes DON'T work in many systems. That is, they don't choke common mode current. Now, the ANTENNA works to the extent that it radiates (and may yield a fine SWR, which is NOT a measure of how well the antenna works), so users think the choke is fine.

The virtue of chokes wound on lossy ferrite cores is that by using a suitable number of turns, the choke, with the stray C between turns and the loss (resistance) coupled from the core forms a parallel resonant circuit with a very low Q, and with a high value of resistance at resonance. And the low Q (typically on the order of 0.5) makes that resonance quite broad so that it can cover multiple ham bands. In addition, #31 material have a second dimensional resonance below 3 MHz that broadens the choking Z curve much as did stagger-tuned" IF stages. That large value resistance reduces common mode current -- it can never "resonate" with the antenna (transmission line) into which it is inserted.

This, and other concepts associated with common mode chokes are articulated in a tutorial that is on my website, and was added to the ARRL Handbook in 2010.

73, Jim K9YC

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