"If the inductance truly is 25mH, and f=1/(2pi*sqrt(LC)), then the SRF equivalent capacitance is around 70pF. Does that seem kind of high?" - Dewster
Yes - Shockingly, surprisingly high.. And I am not sure its right.. But its what my ATE is telling me!
With the results I am getting (been working my way through a box of parts) I am surprised (and cannot really explain) how several of my previous experiments worked at all - But when I put the Bourns / JW Miller 6300 series parts under test, the results are spot on..
The results from the PLA10's dont make any sense really - up to 1.5mH per winding they have high SRF (often higher than the insertion loss dip) but above this value the SRF drops rapidly - well below the "dip"..
Its driving me crazy too - When I saw the results I thought something must be wrong with the test set-up, so dug up my EM test oscillator - in most cases this gave a lower SRF than my ATE.. But on both, the 6300 series parts were spot on - Tried 2.5, 5 and 10mH parts (dont have any 25's or 50's)
I also went over some coils I hand wound on ferrite rod, and these were fine (higher SRF than required) even though I am not a neat coil winder (these were wound by putting the rod into a drill !)
As for temperature dependence - in conventional theremins, the tank inductors are usually the same type, so frequency shift is likely to occur similarly on both oscillators and counteract the drift - I think the problems mainly occur if one is doing something "special" with the antenna inductances - as in, they are "disproportionately" large and changes to their value is not compensated by the same configuration on the reference oscillator... I suppose one could put "equalizing" inductors on the reference oscillator down to a fixed "antenna" capacitance to balance the drifts.. But there are other ways (particularly if one tunes the reference oscillator, and adds compensation at this point)
100mH is unusually high, and 70kHz unusually low! - I honestly thought the CMC method would be sure to work for your application - and Im not sure that it wont - I have used 7.5mH PLA10's at 333kHz (albeit as saturable reactors - but this should make matters worse, not better) - What I am seeing today doesnt make sense - my reactors shouldnt have worked!
I am a bit stumped! I will have a chat with the engineer at the company who made my reactor samples (have emailed him) - And perhaps with CoilCraft who have been helpful in the past. But I have been on this path with variable inductors before - Could not find anyone able to give me the data I was requesting .. Got so piss*d off that I started exploring electronically tunable inductors, and found a whole pre-tube world of saturable reactors and magnetic amplifiers, LOL ;-)
Fred.
ps - what are the currents you expect through the inductors?
I actually thought about putting the whole front-end into thermally isolated unit, and having a peltier device keeping this at a constant 25 degrees C - as in, heating or cooling as required.. OTT or what ? ;-)