mess52 said:
Jim, I just tried the calculator from your link. It is similar to others I have tried. It requires me to know the value of capacitance and inductance to give the resonant frequency. My problem is that I know the frequency, and have no idea what capacitance or inductance to use, or haw to make an educated guess at it. Do you know of another calculator out there that works the problem from the frequency to the required components?
hmmmm that's a math question
with three terms it takes two of them to solve for the third one.
And you only know frequency.So, it'll be necessary to pick either a capacitance or an inductance .
If I plug into that calculator 512 for frequency
And 10e-6 for capacitance (10uf)
i get out 0.00966 henry, or 9.66 millihenry.
So, a 9.66 millihenry choke would resonate at 512 hz with a 10 uf capacitor.
It's probably more convenient to pick an available choke and make the necessary capacitance by paralleling smaller caps. That's because capacitors are cheaper than chokes. Especially in audio range where you need low resistance to give decent Q.
Remember your basics from Navy : Q=X/R
Something like this might work.
http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/1140-103K-RC/M8386-ND/774926
http://www.bourns.com/data/global/pdfs/1140_series.pdf
it's ten millihenries which resonates at 512hz with 9.66 microfarads, real close to a 5.0 and a 4.7 in parallel.
It's about an inch across so should fit down a pipe. The capacitors could be some distance away connected by a twisted pair, preferably shielded.
At that frequency you'll have X = about 31 ohms, the choke is 2.76Ω so Q is only a little over 10, not great but you might get away with it.
Higher current chokes (or audio crossover type from a speaker store) will do better but cost more.
...You've not said how your friend's gizmo excites the tank circuit
...but there's how to use the calculator, which was your question. Play with it a while or use your pocket calculator. Good luck , and keep us posted.
EDIT Hold on a second - Pocket calculator? What was i thinking - you're an old Navy guy. Dust off that Slide Rule !
old jim