Inductor unwinding calculations?

Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
Hello people of diyaudio!
I was given by a friend a set of generic Visaton crossover networks (HW2/70NG). I would like to put them in use for a pair of 2 way speakers. I have already established the values for the 2nd order filters using XSim, and i need to lower the 1mH low pass inductor to around 0.56mH (exact value is not critical, what matters most is that i reduce both by the same amount).
The inductor has 16 verical layers (or stacks?) by 14 horizontal layers (hope the pictures make more sense). So there should be around 224 turns of 1mm copper wire. The coil internal diameter is 18mm, the outer diameter is 45mm, and the coil hight is 15mm.
Is there anyone cunning enough to tell me how many turns should i unwind in order to achieve this value (0.56mH)?
 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    446.4 KB · Views: 225
  • 2.jpg
    2.jpg
    305 KB · Views: 217
AX tech editor
Joined 2002
Paid Member
It is probably possible to calculate the required windings for that value using an average winding diameter. Assuming that you are able to measure, I would proceed to remove say 1/3rd of the layers, then measure, then again remove some windings, etc. Should be able to home in to the required value in a few iterations.

After all, this is diy ;-)

Jan
 
Approximately calculating, there is dcr values on Visaton web for the SP1 air core coils. 0,68 mH= 0,4 ohm; 0,47 mH=0,3 ohm; since there is no 0,56 mH to choose from, the middle dcr value of the two would be about 0,35 ohm. 1 mH = 0,5 ohm, so you'd need to remove the excess of 0,15 ohm of wire to arrive closer to 0,56 mH. Find the characteristic resistance per meter for the copper wire of 1 mm diameter and you can solve for the length of wire by dividing the two values.

You could build this jig to measure directly with a 1 kHz mp3 pure sine wave or search for a coil calculator.
 

Attachments

  • LC measurement with cell phone.png
    LC measurement with cell phone.png
    77.2 KB · Views: 225
56 turns, or about a 1/4 of the 224 sounds dead right. :)

Inductance is the square of the number of turns, disregarding varying size of turns. 3/4 squared is 1mH X 9/16, which should be about 0.56mH.

I'd always take off a bit less, then measure.

SP coils

The data for 1mm windings is saying the resistance should drop from 0.5R to about 0.37R.
 
You have 16 layers of 14 turns each, so 224 turns total

To reduce from 1mH to 0.56mH you must reduce inductance to 56% of original value.
Since inductance varies with the square of turns, you need to reduce winding to square root of 56% so to 0.75 of turns , so to 168 turns.

You must unwind and discard 224-168=56 turns.
 
Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.