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From: Jeroen Belleman <jeroen@nospam.please>
Newsgroups: sci.electronics.design
Subject: Re: Dressing RG6
Date: Wed, 15 May 2024 11:03:22 +0200
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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 <66h74j1vfmbjvvl98jk1k017pimtinv2l5@4ax.com> <v20m3q$dgcq$1@dont-email.me>
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On 5/15/24 01:33, Don wrote:
> Jeroen Belleman wrote:
>> Phil Hobbs wrote:
>>> John Larkin wrote:
>>>> Don wrote:
> 
> <snip>
> 
>>>>> The parasitic capacitance created between coax and its metal armor can
>>>>> open a Pandora's box of potential problems.
>>>>
>>>> Capacitance between the coax outer and the copper pipe? Proper coax
>>>> shouldn't have any external field.
>>>
>>> If the whole system is really coaxial, that’s true. Leaky shields, ground
>>> loops, and so on, will modify that.
>>>
>>> Depending on the application, you may or may not care.
>>> If the whole system is really coaxial, that’s true. Leaky shields, ground
>>> loops, and so on, will modify that.
>>>
>>> Depending on the application, you may or may not care.
>>
>> I've been putting coax inside copper tubes or braids to measure
>> and/or reduce the transfer impedance (leakage). I did that to
>> measure small signals in a particle accelerator, which typically
>> has kicker magnets and RF cavities with kA currents and kV
>> voltages nearby.
>>
>> A colleague developed a special low transfer impedance coax
>> cable for this sort of application. It had two screens with
>> intermediate magnetic shielding. It was unpleasant to work
>> with, because part of the magnetic shielding was a steel
>> spiral foil tape that was razor sharp. But it worked really
>> well.
> 
> Empirical observation always trumps theory for me. Did you ground [1]
> the copper tubes or braids?

Both ends were connected to the connector shields. The point of
the exercise was to reduce transfer impedance, which at low
frequency (<1MHz) is simply proportional to screen resistance.

Jeroen Belleman