Peter H. wrote:
A Franklin radiator looks like two self-supporting towers, one inverted on top
the other, fat ends touching.
Nope.
A Franklin is defined as a center-fed sectional, which is 180 degrees over 180
degrees. The base of the bottom section is connected to the ground system by an
impedance, usually a capacitor.
So it is asymmetric, with the two sections slightly different lengths, or the
base capacitor is used to compensate for that?
If it were in free air, it would simply be a vertical dipole, but since the
ground is below it, the electrical lengths of the bottom leg is changed,
right?
KSTP's Franklin is not a Frankin on account it is 179 degrees over 179 degrees.
What does this do to the pattern in real terms?
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
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