Tom,
Thanks for your reply. Below are a couple of the comments I found on another forum that had me thinking that I should stick with a wooden enclosure:
"...I think you are right about the enclosure. It is a Faraday box. Any magnetic fields inside that box tends to get squashed if they are not static."
"An aluminium box will lower the inductance of the coils quite a lot, as would a brass box. A steel box would increase the inductance a lot. Either way you could also be having a faraday effect, or at least a compression of field lines, or even a coupling of 2 coils via the box."
I don't know if the above statements are correct or not, but they raised my concern. If a steel chassis is in fact benign related to the inductor's magnetic fields, then that would be one option I might explore.
Thanks again for your help,
John
Thanks for your reply. Below are a couple of the comments I found on another forum that had me thinking that I should stick with a wooden enclosure:
"...I think you are right about the enclosure. It is a Faraday box. Any magnetic fields inside that box tends to get squashed if they are not static."
"An aluminium box will lower the inductance of the coils quite a lot, as would a brass box. A steel box would increase the inductance a lot. Either way you could also be having a faraday effect, or at least a compression of field lines, or even a coupling of 2 coils via the box."
I don't know if the above statements are correct or not, but they raised my concern. If a steel chassis is in fact benign related to the inductor's magnetic fields, then that would be one option I might explore.
Thanks again for your help,
John