could anyone give me imformation on how they are constructed
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co-axial coils
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Re: co-axial coils
Frank,
Coaxial coils are made by stacking 3 same-sized coils in a cylindrical row, spaced slightly apart. Think of donuts stacked 3 high. Coaxial literally means "along the same axis".
Usually (probably always), the center coil is transmit and the 2 outer coils are receive, and the receive coils are connected out-of-phase. Therefore, they nominally receive the same signal from the transmit coil, but since they're out-of-phase the signals cancel. When you bring a target close to the coils it creates an imbalance in the out-of-phase signals so now there is a net signal at the receiver.
Coax coils are usually thicker than other coil types. I think the early Garrett VLF detectors used them, as did the C&G 'cat detectors. You can also make the 2 receive coils smaller than the transmit coil, probably gives better ground rejection.
Regards,
Carl
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Re: co-axial coils
Yes, they must be nulled. If both RX coils have the same # of windings then they simply need to be equally spaced from the TX coil and connected out-of-phase for nulling.
Eric is right, coax coils cancel external interference better because both coils are affected equally but oppositely, thus canceling the effect. Compared to concentric and DD, I don't thing the coax gives as much depth unless you substantially space the RX coils, which makes the overall search head thicker. That's because a target will affect the closest RX coil but will also, to a lesser amount, affect the farther RX coil which creates some cancelation. Coils with only 1 RX winding don't have this problem, even concentric coils that have a secondary RX winding since it's a much "weaker" coil.
- Carl
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