Dots on inductors

R

Raveninghorde

Jan 1, 1970
0
I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?
 
L

legg

Jan 1, 1970
0
I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?

It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL
 
S

SoothSayer

Jan 1, 1970
0
It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL


The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Raveninghorde said:
I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?


Nope, no standard there. Fastest way to find out is crack one open and
look. Watch out for ferrite shrapnel. The gentle method is to measure
the RF leaking out with one end grounded and the other energized, then
reverse. Then talk to the mfg whether their production procedure (SOP)
calls out to always connect in this particular way. Typically they are
but it can be tough to obtain something in writing about it.
 
B

Bill Sloman

Jan 1, 1970
0
  The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER.  In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point.  In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

  An inductor is a non phased device.

  No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized.  AT ALL.

Wrong. If the outermost layer of a multilayer winding is connected to
ground at one end, the inductor as a whole will radiate appreciably
less than it would if one end of the outermost layer were connected to
a high AC voltage.

It only the stray capacitative coupling that changes, but that can
matter quite a lot.
 
R

Raveninghorde

Jan 1, 1970
0
Nope, no standard there. Fastest way to find out is crack one open and
look. Watch out for ferrite shrapnel. The gentle method is to measure
the RF leaking out with one end grounded and the other energized, then
reverse. Then talk to the mfg whether their production procedure (SOP)
calls out to always connect in this particular way. Typically they are
but it can be tough to obtain something in writing about it.

I've just checked with a German manufacturer and they confirm the dot
on their inductors is the start of the inner winding.

I appreciate not all manufacturers will necessarily be as consistent.
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Raveninghorde said:
I've just checked with a German manufacturer and they confirm the dot
on their inductors is the start of the inner winding.

I appreciate not all manufacturers will necessarily be as consistent.


Great, then at least you found one where they have a system to it. If
this is for a product design I'd still get that in writing though.
 
L

legg

Jan 1, 1970
0
The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.

It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. Inductors with multiple, tapped and
phase-coherent windings do exist and are constructed with all of the
precautions required for transformers. The are called inductors simply
as a convention to indicate their intended use.

Every line-powered computer you've ever seen probably has one of the
more common examples; a common-mode choke to assist with EMC
compliance. Such a part becomes unpredictable (if not completely
useless) if phasing or winding instructions are ignored.

There are many intentional constructional details in magnetic
components that are not immediately obvious, even to the experienced
technician, that can determine their effectiveness in many ways.

RL
 
R

Raveninghorde

Jan 1, 1970
0
Great, then at least you found one where they have a system to it. If
this is for a product design I'd still get that in writing though.

What they said by email was:

The dot signifies the start of the winding on the inductor, thus this
would be the inner layer of the windings which would connect to the
hot side of the output of the DC/DC converter. The outer winding of
the inductor in effect self shields the emi on the inner windings.
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Raveninghorde said:
What they said by email was:

The dot signifies the start of the winding on the inductor, thus this
would be the inner layer of the windings which would connect to the
hot side of the output of the DC/DC converter. The outer winding of
the inductor in effect self shields the emi on the inner windings.


Perfect, then you got it in writing. I thought it was just a phone
conversation across the Channel.
 
L

legg

Jan 1, 1970
0
legg said:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 15:44:04 -0800, SoothSayer


On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 16:48:51 +0000, Raveninghorde

I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?
It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL

The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.

It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. ...


It often does:

http://katalog.we-online.de/kataloge/eisos/media/pdf/744778920.pdf

[...]

Or

http://www.coilcraft.com/pdf_viewer/showpdf.cfm?f=pdf_store:lps5015.pdf

Interesting; both of them. At a quick glance, they are unique in the
range of both manufacturers.

For Coilcraft, the 'dot' isn't actually associared with either solder
junction, but appears equidistant between the two......so you'd have
to crack one open to figure out what they mean, and hope that the
meaning isn't subverted in the part's sales lifetime. It's not
guaranteed that the coil winding personnel have even a working
familiarity with the language of the spec......

The instruction 'winding direction' is unfortunately ambiguous in the
English language, as winding is both a noun and a verb. When
indicating prefered wire layout, I always indicate the direction of
the coil former's rotation (ie the verb sense of the winding machine's
function) and illustrate the movement of the physical part, to avoid
this (hopefully....).

RL
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
legg said:
legg wrote:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 15:44:04 -0800, SoothSayer


On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 16:48:51 +0000, Raveninghorde

I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?
It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL
The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.
It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. ...

It often does:

http://katalog.we-online.de/kataloge/eisos/media/pdf/744778920.pdf

[...]
Or

http://www.coilcraft.com/pdf_viewer/showpdf.cfm?f=pdf_store:lps5015.pdf

Interesting; both of them. At a quick glance, they are unique in the
range of both manufacturers.

For Coilcraft, the 'dot' isn't actually associared with either solder
junction, but appears equidistant between the two......so you'd have
to crack one open to figure out what they mean, and hope that the
meaning isn't subverted in the part's sales lifetime. It's not
guaranteed that the coil winding personnel have even a working
familiarity with the language of the spec......

The instruction 'winding direction' is unfortunately ambiguous in the
English language, as winding is both a noun and a verb. When
indicating prefered wire layout, I always indicate the direction of
the coil former's rotation (ie the verb sense of the winding machine's
function) and illustrate the movement of the physical part, to avoid
this (hopefully....).

It's not that unique, even in the distant lands of China they do it:

http://xfmrs.com/pdf/2xfs1m.pdf

But it's always good policy to obtain written confirmation about the dot
and winding orientation.
 
L

legg

Jan 1, 1970
0
legg said:
It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. ...


It often does:

http://katalog.we-online.de/kataloge/eisos/media/pdf/744778920.pdf

[...]

and, of course, there was actually a noticeable effect on the EMI
plots, when checked........making the effort worthwhile?

There'a difference between anecdote and application. There's a
difference between a 200W toroid and a shielded bobbin core.

The costs of playing it safe, just in case, can whittle a budget past
the bare bone.

RL
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
legg said:
legg said:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 15:44:04 -0800, SoothSayer


On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 16:48:51 +0000, Raveninghorde

I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?
It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL
The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.
It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. ...

It often does:

http://katalog.we-online.de/kataloge/eisos/media/pdf/744778920.pdf

[...]

and, of course, there was actually a noticeable effect on the EMI
plots, when checked........making the effort worthwhile?

There'a difference between anecdote and application. There's a
difference between a 200W toroid and a shielded bobbin core.

The costs of playing it safe, just in case, can whittle a budget past
the bare bone.

It already applies at much lower power levels. I finished a flyback
design a few weeks ago. If you get the winding orientation wrong on
those then all hell breaks loose at the EMC chambers.

The word "shielded" in ferrites is often more a marketing term. A closer
looks typically reveals a fairly large potting area. The potting
compound is colored almost the same as the core.
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
John said:
legg said:
legg wrote:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 15:44:04 -0800, SoothSayer


On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 16:48:51 +0000, Raveninghorde

I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?
It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL
The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.
It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. ...
It often does:

http://katalog.we-online.de/kataloge/eisos/media/pdf/744778920.pdf

[...]
and, of course, there was actually a noticeable effect on the EMI
plots, when checked........making the effort worthwhile?

There'a difference between anecdote and application. There's a
difference between a 200W toroid and a shielded bobbin core.

The costs of playing it safe, just in case, can whittle a budget past
the bare bone.
It already applies at much lower power levels. I finished a flyback
design a few weeks ago. If you get the winding orientation wrong on
those then all hell breaks loose at the EMC chambers.

The word "shielded" in ferrites is often more a marketing term. A closer
looks typically reveals a fairly large potting area. The potting
compound is colored almost the same as the core.

Since some ferrites are conductive, it's not always obvious which
connection will radiate less.

True, but fairly easy to test when you have a near field probe kit. That
kit is probably the most worn tool out here. Other than the bottle
opener :)
 
L

legg

Jan 1, 1970
0
legg said:
legg wrote:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 15:44:04 -0800, SoothSayer


On Mon, 26 Nov 2012 16:48:51 +0000, Raveninghorde

I read many years ago (National app note from memory) that one should
connect the inner layer of an inductor to the switch in a buck
regulator and the outer layer to the capacitor as the outer layer will
then act as a screen.

I don't know if it makes a difference in practice but it's free.

With many modern inductors it is impossible to see how they are wound
so the only indication of "polarity" is the dot. Is the dot arbitary
and down to the winder or does it actually relate in anyway to the way
the inductor is wound?
It indicates phasing alone. Constructional details, where critical,
will only show on the winding sheet.

You won't get the winding you want without including winding
instructions in the transformer drawing and then batch inspecting each
purchased lot.

RL
The dot is for phasing of a TRANSFORMER. In such a case, it indicates
the winding START point. In many cases, it is already part of the
bobbin. In some cases, it gets painted on as part of the winding process.
There is no need to mark the winding start of an inductor.

An inductor is a non phased device.

No, it matters not which 'way' it gets utilized. AT ALL.
It is highly unlikely that a dot will occur on a magnetic drawing that
has only one winding. ...

It often does:

http://katalog.we-online.de/kataloge/eisos/media/pdf/744778920.pdf

[...]

and, of course, there was actually a noticeable effect on the EMI
plots, when checked........making the effort worthwhile?

There'a difference between anecdote and application. There's a
difference between a 200W toroid and a shielded bobbin core.

The costs of playing it safe, just in case, can whittle a budget past
the bare bone.

It already applies at much lower power levels. I finished a flyback
design a few weeks ago. If you get the winding orientation wrong on
those then all hell breaks loose at the EMC chambers.

The function of the rf-conductive core body has also to be taken into
account in the radiation process. Capacitance to the core from
different portions of a winding (or windings) has to be taken into
account, as well as possible core body and screen current paths.
The word "shielded" in ferrites is often more a marketing term. A closer
looks typically reveals a fairly large potting area. The potting
compound is colored almost the same as the core.

A shielded bobbin core, on the other hand, specifically indicates the
employment of a sleeve structure with a controlled gap, whether SMD or
through-hole. This controlled gap is where the filled adhesive is
present.

RL
 
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