Originally posted by dR-Green
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This is my spectrum:
very small peak at:
0.925MHz
something bigger peak at:
1.390MHz
I measured the very large peak at
2.766MHz
There is no resonance above this. I cannot plot the vallues because my nanoamp meter goes over the max.
What I would like to compare is this resonance spectrum for the secondary coil. Perhaps you are measuring how the sine signal gets distorted by a not perfect working frequency generator that does not make a perfect sine? I would probable find those distortions if I could measure more precise or used more power but the distortion is not my interest at this point for simplicity I assume the sine is perfect. I was studying the resonant behavior of the secondary coil to see if it behaved like the longitudional network. Those peaks really stand out and I see how the harmonics are at lower frequencies than the main peak.
It is a very odd spectrum as normally I would find harmonic peaks at higher frequencies than the fundamental peak. If you think about it there is a large resonance at a certain frequency than you double that frequency and there is no resonance at all. So these are not normal waves that make the signal peak. They seem like inverted waves or something? Eric made a lot of counterspace comments on them.
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