Originally posted by Mike Sulzer
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For a given applied voltage, the difference in current between [1Ω in series with 1MΩ] and [100Ω in series with 1MΩ] is insignificant.
For a solenoid, the difference in inductance between an alnico core and a steel core is not so large because... the permeability of either material is significantly greater than the permeability of free space?
But the difference in inductance between an air core solenoid and a steel core solenoid is...?
And this equation may have little to no practical value in the real world?
For μ0 = permeability of free space; k = relative permeability; μ = kμ0
BTW, I'm only asking because I'd like to try building a vintage style "Varitone"- and according to some sources, the original Gibson inductors were in the range 15-16 Henry (not a value you can typically buy off the shelf).
Again, my apologies for the intrusion.
EDIT1: Is part of the confusion because I'm thinking about a stand-alone inductor and Mike was originally referring to a magnetic structure that includes the string gap? Or because you-all are talking about an oblong coil wrapped around a row of polepieces separated by air, and I'm thinking of a round coil wrapped around a solid core? Or something like that?
EDIT2: You'd think it would be easy to wind a steel-cored solenoid to within a factor of ten from a desired inductance value, but I'm embarrassed to admit that I don't know how.
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