Ferrite core selection charts

A. Which mix to use (HF-focused)

MixBest general regionTypical “why”Practical guidance
Mix 31~1–30 MHzExcellent for choking common-mode on HF; good broadband behaviorBest first choice for chokes and many broadband transformers
Mix 43~5–50 MHzGood general HF/VHF mix; often used in legacy designsWorks fine on HF, tends to be a bit more VHF-friendly than 31
Mix 52Higher HF into VHFLower loss at higher frequenciesLess common for HF EFHW transformers; more niche

Rule of thumb:

  • For chokes: start with Mix 31.
  • For HF transformers (9:1, 49:1): Mix 31 or 43; for many stations Mix 31 is the safer “broad HF” bet.

B. Core size vs power (practical guidance)

This is intentionally conservative. The exact limit depends on duty cycle (SSB vs FT8), enclosure heat, winding, and SWR.

ApplicationQRP (≤10W)100W classHigh duty / 400W+
4:1 current balun1 × 2.4″ toroid often OK1–2 × 2.4″ toroids common2–3 larger cores, heavy wire
9:1 unun1 × 2.4″ toroid often OK1–2 × 2.4″ toroids recommended2–3 cores; watch heating
49:1 EFHW1 × 2.4″ may work (watch voltage)2 × 2.4″ cores strongly preferred2–4 cores + spacing/venting

Additional power/duty-cycle cautions

  • Digital modes (FT8/RTTY) stress cores significantly more than SSB.
  • High SWR at the transformer increases core heating sharply.

C. Wire and winding recommendations

BuildSuggested wireTurn count guidanceNotes
4:1 Guanellapaired insulated wires (bifilar)8–12 turns per 1:1Symmetry matters; keep leads short
9:1 autotransformerenamel wire or insulated hook-up9 turns total, tap at 3Spread turns evenly; avoid crossing
49:1 autotransformerenamel wire, higher voltage rating14 total, tap at 2Voltage stress is real; insulation matters

General guidance

  • Use heavier wire as power increases (and for mechanical durability).
  • Keep the transformer inside a weatherproof box; include strain relief and a drip loop outdoors.

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