No.  At low frequencies hysteresis loss dominates. Soft ferrites have high 
resistivity. Eddy currents increase with frequency but 160m is still fairly 
low. 

In SMPS transformer design we look at applied volt*seconds. When the applied 
v*s goes up, as would be the case with high SWR, you push further out the BH 
curve increasing hysteresis loss. With each cycle, the area inside the BH curve 
determines the loss (heating). As you approach the horizontal part of the curve 
(saturation), inductance collapses and the winding looks like a short. Same if 
core hits Curie temp then mag domains can no longer be aligned. 

Soft ferrites are not permanent magnets, they are NOT in fixed alignment. 
Magnetic domains are flopping around with the applied field. 

Hope this clarifies something. Hihi

73
Josh W6XU 

Sent from my iPad

> On Sep 2, 2020, at 10:58 PM, Adrian <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> core heating is affected only by the AC (induced eddy *currents*) content of 
> the signal. 

______________________________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:[email protected]

This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
Message delivered to [email protected] 

Reply via email to