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jn,Your insight on the insulation thickness is an interesting insight. Somehow I am lost on the significance of 2.7.
John,it is hard.There is science everywhere you have to find it.. So using PTFE does not reduce the capacitance too much I guess ,except if it is lower in thickness than PVC.
As the insulation gets thinner, the inductance will go down and the capacitance will rise.jn
How come?
Let's understand what is inductance first.Please read the statement taken from a long established cable manufacturer's 'cook book':-"When current flows in a wire, it creates a magnetic field about the wire, which generates voltages along the same wire as the current changes. These opposing voltages act to limit the rate at which the current can change. This effect is termed as inductance & is measured in units called henrys.
The self inductance of a round straight copper wire is on the order of 0.4 micro-henry/ft & is relatively UNaffected by the diameter or length of the wire.
The self inductance of twisted pairs of wires is on the order of 0.08 micro-henry/ft; while the mutual inductance of a coaxial construction is 0.14 Lg10 (D/d) micro-henrys/ft."
The insulation material jacketing a round wire will reduce the propagation velocity(v.c.) of a signal wave to travel along the wire.
The thickness of the insulation is to safeguard the maximum voltage of the current flowing thru the wire against leakage.So please tell us how the "insulation" thickness of a wire goes down with its inductance?c-J
See what happens when you ask a person who's full time job in a science lab, is getting more & more electricity through smaller & smaller wires, faster & faster."So please tell us how the "insulation" thickness of a wire goes down with its inductance?"Short answer: That's backwards, it's as the insulation gets thinner the inductance goes down.But really it's not the insulation getting thinner, it's the two conductors getting closer together.
I know all about not being a 'rocket scientist', I saw that bit on "Big Bang Theory".
For coax, [the velocity] is 1/sqr(DC), DC being the relative dielectric constant..
Really?
So you give somebody a big lecture about propagation velocity and provide three examples, two of which are absolute and one of which is relative to light.Not too rigorous if you ask me.
JN,I am kind of curious about how some of my old cables would stack up. Is there an easy way to measure the characteristic impedance of a cable?Thanks,Rich
JN,If I were going to make a cable with a characteristic impedance of 6 using cat 5 cable would I need 8 runs of cable or 4? I think 8 is correct but I am not sure.Rich
(1) The external inductance of a wire is absolutely dependent on where the return current is. Current can only flow in a loop, and how it returns will govern the system inductance. There is NO SUCH THING as the external inductance of a conductor if the return path is not specified.(2) As to the statement about coax.... There is no mutual inductance between a coax core and it's shield. This is a simple result of geometry. .. This is a consequence of the braid's external field being equal to and opposite the core's field in the space outside the braid. Also note that this cancellation only works if the currents are equal and opposite, and the core is concentric to the braid, placing the current centroids on the same line in space.That is in essence almost correct. jn
Hi.(1) So you stated a conductor also gets "external inductance" besides its self inductance or "internal inductance" as you quoted. Yet the external inductance is "absolutely dependant" on where the current returns.The ideal situation is like a coax where the return current of equal value flows back thru its braid/foil shield & complete cancellation of mutual inductance is possible.
But in realworld situation for non-coax cables where the return cable can be placed far away from the incoming signal cable.Then the usefulness of the cable external inductance is no long valid as no way the external inductance can interact each other in a distance. So why mention it vs its self inductance, it being so vulnerable to the cable positioning?
Even in the ideal situation of a tightly twisted pair of cable, like Cat 6 LAN cable. The return path of the return signal is frequency selective. Physical layout of the device can affect substantially the return pattern of the return signal currents.
For lower frequencies, the return signal will go for return loop of minimum resistance, ie. the chassis. Only for certain HF & above, the return current will follow the loop of minimum inductance, which would be the shield of the cable.
However in realworld coax cable building, it really impossible to extrude a coax with absolutely coaxial geometry. Plus any truecoaxial cable will be deformed on actual field laying, making complete mutual inductance cancellation impossible. Thereforemutual inductance always exist in a coax.