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I have an old coil from fischer that I would like to use again.

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  • I have an old coil from fischer that I would like to use again.

    The coil has 4.8-4.9 ohms and 38-39 ohms.
    Can anyone tell me which detector this coil was originally used for?

    Thanks in advance and best regards from South Tyrol, Northern Italy
    Walter Aster​

  • #2
    some pics of it will give a light, from you, for coil ID.

    Anatloy

    Comment


    • #3
      hello anatoly

      this is a kit from Nuova Elletronice, an Italian electronics magazine. A good friend of mine built this device many years ago. But he wasn't particularly satisfied. He found this almost unused coil while cleaning out the cellar and I bought it from him for 20 euros. As the reel has no labeling and I only found out on the internet that it may be a vintage model from fischer, I wanted to ask if anyone could tell me more about it.

      Walter

      *https://www.worldradiohistory.com/IN...=auto,-462,758

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      • #4
        If the coil you have is the same as in the article, then its a 1990s Fisher. Fisher used the same coil housing for several different coil designs. The resistances you list are very close to what I have for a CZ coil, I would need to compare the inductances to be sure.

        Comment


        • #5
          Thank you very much.
          In the meantime I have also done some research here in the forum and found this list:
          XLT 9.5”
          TX: L=540uH R=1.4 ohms
          RX: L=36mH R=122.8 ohms
          ---
          Fisher 1210
          Rx 6.48mH / 15.3 ohms
          Tx (1.64mH / 7.7Ohms) + (1.62mH / 7.5Ohms)

          Fisher 1266
          Rx 10-10.4mH / 38.2 - 39.3 Ohm
          Tx 2.14-2.2mH / 4.7 - 4.9 Ohm


          Fisher Quick Silver
          Rx 6.69-6.7mH / 31-32Ohm
          Tx 0.945-0.960mH / 3-3.1Ohm

          White's Spectrum
          Rx 1.2 36mH 123 ohms
          Tx 4.5 540uH 1.4 ohms

          White's 6B
          Rx 1.2 16mH 35 ohms
          Tx 4.5 1.7mH 7 ohms

          White's DFX concentric
          Rx 1.2 13.8mH 36 ohms
          Tx 4.5 540uH 2.7 ohms

          White's DFX DD
          Rx 1.2 14.2mH 55 ohms
          Tx 4.5 680uH 3.5 ohms

          Tesoro concentric
          Rx 3.4 6.2mH 22 ohms
          Tx 1.5 5.7mH 22 ohms

          Tesoro early Lobo DD
          Rx 1.3 1.35mH 12 ohms
          Tx 2.4 10mH 55 ohms

          Fisher CZ
          Rx 1.2 6.8mH 30 ohms
          Tx 3.4 1mH 2.8 ohms

          Comment


          • #6
            Unfortunately, I don't know whether you can trust this information? According to the resistance measurements I carried out myself and the comparisons with this table, it looks very much as if it is the search coil of a fischer 1266. That would be very important to me, because I am working on a replica (a slightly modified SMD version) of this 1266 machine. All the professionals here in the forum will laugh at this because the effort involved is far too great)..... but it's also a very personal bet between me and my son.

            P.S. Thanks again for the welcome to the forum. Thank you!
            ​Walter
            ​​

            Comment


            • #7
              I don't know whether you can trust this information = as you can see the numbers are varying that's mean they are not critical, most of the coils have 80 turns for Tx and double of that for Rx, wire diameter 0.5mm Tx , 0.25 mm for Rx.
              I would like to use again. = Are you going to build a detector?

              Comment


              • #8
                Hello Pito,
                yes, I would like to build “a detector”. It's actually already finished. The problem is not really the coil. It's the detector and the coil together. The detector has a quartz oscillator and the square wave signal is transferred to the TX coil via a level converter. The resonant frequency must therefore be just as correct as the winding resistance. +/- a few 100 milliohms. Otherwise the power / the current​... is missing or the signal is distorted.
                However, I have now simulated both oscillator circuits in LT spice using the values in this “found” list. I think it should fit.
                Thanks again.

                Comment


                • #9
                  The resonant frequency = can be corrected by changing the value of capacitor (s)
                  to adopt your coil, show the schematic

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Click image for larger version

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                    hello, thank you for your inspirational help.
                    I think I have solved the problem in the meantime. The values from the list seem to fit the 1266. They even seem to be pretty accurate. I have a 77.5 Khz and a 153.6 Khz crystal available. Divided by 1:16 and 1:32 respectively, I should be able to match the resonant frequency of the coil pretty well in both cases. I can then compensate for the remaining small inaccuracy with a capacitor.
                    Attached Files

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      you need to measure the inductances AT FIRST. sorry, but you ignored Carl's question, for unknown cause. the Ohms are telling nothing.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Hello...
                        that was a misunderstanding
                        The only values I have are the millimeter dimensions of the coil and the values of 4.9 and 39 ohms measured on the cable.
                        The total diameter of the housing is 201.5mm.
                        The diameter of the outer coil shell, measured on the underside, is 113mm. The outer diameter of the inner coil shell is 102.5mm.
                        The total height of the coil shells is 117mm.
                        The radius (small coil shell) inside is 47.5mm.
                        The average winding diameter of the outer coil (TX) is 187mm.
                        The average winding diameter of the inner coil is 107mm.

                        Now my logical thinking tells me that these coils are manufactured by machine and therefore vary only slightly in their electrical values.
                        Example: 4.8 ohms can sometimes become 4.9 ohms. It must also be possible to divide the ohm values between the two partial coils (TX and bucking) and the cable.

                        The coil windings are encased in epoxy resin. The diameter of the windings can therefore hardly be more than +/-5-6 mm at the most.


                        Online calculator: https://www.electronicdeveloper.de/I...LuftMehrl.aspx
                        Fisher 1266 Coil
                        Rx 10-10.4mH / 38.2-39.3 Ohm
                        Tx 2.14-2.2mH / 4.7-4.9 Ohm

                        Values also work in the LT spice simulation.​

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          i have especial folder in Archive with all coil calculators, all of them i checked. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JB4...usp=drive_link

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Thank you.
                            I have now found the very best coil calculator. It's on my table.
                            A present from my son. Well, half of it. We share the machines.
                            And yes, that particular list above, the one with the coil parameters, is OK.
                            My coil has TX 2.2 mh / 4.87 ohms.
                            RX 38.44 ohms. 10.3 mH.

                            Click image for larger version

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