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Old September 17th 05, 08:24 AM
Ian Jackson
 
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In message , Jim Kelley
writes


Cecil Moore wrote:
Ian Jackson wrote:

Just a quick question.
What is the impedance at the centre of an infinitely long dipole (in
free space)?

Same as a terminated dipole in an anechoic chamber? 600-800 ohms?


Not at zero Hz.

ac6xg


What is a 'terminated dipole'?
And why 600-800 ohms?

No, Mine will be just a normal dipole (but long). I'll be in a
spaceship, miles from anywhere, and I intend to put out a really long
antenna so I can work the universe on all amateur bands. (I don't care
about the polar diagram - there's bound to be someone out there in one
of the major lobes).

I intend to throw out an infinitely long wire either side of the ship,
and use a balanced tuner connected directly to the antenna (no feeder
required). Because of weight restrictions, I can only take one tuner,
and I want to make sure that the one I do take will cope with the feed
impedance of the antenna.

I think the impedance will be the same at all frequencies (maybe even at
'zero Hz'). But what will it be?

Ian.

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