Thread: Balun Use/Need
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Old January 22nd 05, 05:15 PM
Cecil Moore
 
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Richard Fry wrote:

"Richard Clark" wrote
The transmission line being orthogonal is in the plane of the
dipole's null - hence zero conduction.


But the nulls of a dipole are off its ends. The t-line connects to the
dipole center, where relative field normal to the longitudinal axis of
the dipole is at a maximum.


The orthogonal part is the important part. The radiation "sees"
the transmission line on edge and doesn't induct (much) energy
to it. The energy transferred from the antenna to the feedline
is a function of the cosine of the angle between them. If the
feedline is hanging down vertically from a horizontal dipole,
for common-mode purposes, the feedline is vertically polarized
and the antenna is horizontally polarized. It is when you bend
the feedline at some angle other than 90 degrees to the antenna
that the cosine of that angle becomes non-zero.
--
73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp


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