I would like to add a balun/choke to my dipole for the reasons outlined in Using a balun with a resonant dipole. In the spirit of continued kit and/or DIY building for my ham shack, I set out to investigate how I might best proceed "from scratch".
Simply wind two conductors together over some sort of core?
At http://vk6ysf.com/balun_guanella_current_1-1.htm a design is given for a 1:1 current balun that simply wraps a pair of wires around a toroidal core:
…or as http://vk5ajl.com/projects/baluns.php#current even shows:
I suppose the air-wound "ugly balun" as demonstrated at http://www.hamuniverse.com/balun.html also fits in this same category, unless using coax in place of the bifilar winding somehow changes things?
So that's all well and good, I guess.
Two tangled toroids?
But then — under the same "Guanella balun" name as the first diagram above, no less! — I find that http://www.kn9b.us/guanella-balun presents this diagram:
…which is to be built using two toroids resulting in something that looks like this:
Is there any benefit to this dual core balun over the single core type? What is the purpose of this sort of "push-pull" reminiscent design? Is it worth buying two toroids and going to twice the trouble of winding and sorting out which loose ends connect to which others, versus just winding a pair of wires around a rusty bolt, or wrapping some coax around some scrap PVC?
Chokes are of limited use when the antenna is high impedance, but then common mode current is likely to be small in magnitude, and the range over which a typical balanced dipole will exhibit impedance of >3,000 ohms is quite narrow usually. In that case, a true narrow band transformer is probably the only option that will be really effective.
– Hamsterdave May 04 '16 at 23:19I can find no information at all to support (or debunk) the claim that it reduces saturation, though I can find the claim made in many forums and such.
– Hamsterdave May 05 '16 at 18:13