"greg knapp 5" wrote in message
...
I need your advice, as I have never worked with open wire lines before.
I need to feed many different antennas with open wire line and need to run
the feeline from each about 200 feet from the back pasture to the shack. I
don't want to walk out 200 feet and throw knife switches to chose the
antenna/feedline I want to feed, so I plan to run separate 600 ohm open
feeds for each antenna all the way to the shack.
The problem is I don't know what the effect is or how to handle the
multiple open wire feed lines, as they will be parallel for probably
150-200 feet. I haven't found anything in literature describing this.
For instance, will they interact? how far do you space the feedlines from
one another? If I have 4 feedlines, can I stack them vertically or
horizontally one foot apart from each other? How much is enough
separation? What other precautions do I need? Need they be twisted if
they are not near anything other than the other feed lines?
Any help is appreciated.
73,
Greg, N6GK
Hi Greg:
I have just run a free space NEC 2 model of a pair of horizontally
positioned 6" wide, 600 ohm, transmission lines, vertically separated by
12". The model was run from 29 to 31 MHz. On 30 MHz , with both lines
terminated in 600 ohms the isolation was about 39 dB. With both lines
terminated in 6,000 ohms the isolation improved to 66 dB. The actual range
of impedances will be much higher, and complex, but it does give an idea of
the order of magnitude of the isolation. The calculation is based on the
ratio of the peak currents observed.
Hope this helps,
73,
Frank (VE6CB)
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