jean_jean
Newbie level 1
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2016
- Messages
- 1
- Helped
- 0
- Reputation
- 0
- Reaction score
- 0
- Trophy points
- 1
- Activity points
- 26
I believe that coil of wire is a length of coax and the delay is simply due to the propagation delay through it's length.If you only require a fixed delay, the coil of wire method is often used in oscilloscopes to delay the signal so you can see the edge the oscilloscope is triggered to.
Its simple, can have a very wide bandwidth and is pretty low cost.
View attachment 127745
Your decimal point is a little off. :wink:...............
To produce a delay of 50 uSec, at the speed of light, you would run a signal through 19 feet of wire.
Transmission lines have a speed reduction by factor √Er, about 1.6 for usual coax cables, give 1,5 ns/ft (5 ns/m).The speed of light is about 1nS/ft, so 50us would require about 50,000 feet.
Your decimal point is a little off. :wink:
The speed of light is about 1nS/ft, so 50us would require about 50,000 feet.
Maybe, but not this way. Please see point b) in my previous post (#9).And I seem to recall the tv coils produced 1uS of delay with 100 or 200 feet of wire.
You must be right, because 19 feet sounded too low to me as well. Here's the way I calculated it. I still can't see what I did wrong.
186000 x 5280 / 50000000 = 19.6 ft.
There was a brief time, before digital circuitry really took off where lumped LC delay lines were used in equipment that had delays in the order of a few microseconds. This might have been around the mid 1960's.b) Delays made with coils wound over, and/or covered with, coaxial conductive cylinders. This acts like an artificial delay line with high values of distributed inductance and capacitance per unit of length.
My rough estimate was 50,000 feet, while 9.3 miles is 49,100 feet, about 2% difference -- close enough for government work. :wink:Now I see what I did wrong. It should be:
186000 x 5280 x 50 / 1000000 = ... which is 9.3 miles. Now it sounds too much.
- - - Updated - - -
But it's a closer match to your figure.
And I seem to recall the tv coils produced 1uS of delay with 100 or 200 feet of wire.
Please see point b) in my previous post (#9).
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?