HIGH Q CAPS FOR VLF LOOP ANTENNA?
On 26 Oct 2005 09:27:44 -0700, "K7ITM" wrote:
I could perhaps scan the relevant pages of the references I
mentioned...
No, I can get them att he schools library I think. thanks for the
offer.
How are you planning to couple your 2-ohm load to your loop without
doing really bad things to its Q?
Is it better to convert the loop to a higher impedance just to feed it
into the house? It appears that anything I do is going to knock the
heck out of the antennas Q though.
I have not decided whether to mount the receiver at the antenna yet,
or whether to run the twisted line directly into the house from the
antenna (since it's a short run). Most likely it will have a short run
of cat 5 cable going from the antenna to a 1 to 1 toroid transformer
located in the receiver. The only selectivity for the receiver will be
the antenna itself. The receiver is very small, and uses very little
power, so it's pretty feasible to mount the entire receiver at the
antenna and run a balanced line feed of the audio into the house.
(And just what sort of detector do
you have that represents a 2 ohm load?)
Is it better to convert the loop to a higher impedance just to feed it
into the house?
It's an analog switch input, modified by my neighbor that gave me one
of them. The switch vendor says the switch series resistance should be
around 3 ohms, but it measures around 2.5 ohms. Probably is a little
lower than expected due to the integrating capacitors (.1 uF) which
are hung on the output of each switch. The .1's go to ground.
I measured it twice, once with a 1:1:1 isolation transformer and once
with a 6:1:1 isolation transformer....The tester looses accuracy at
low impedances, so we repeated the measurement with the generator
feeding the high impedance side of the a transformer also. I got
nearly the same reading after correcting for the transformers
impedance step down value, since both readings agree pretty well with
the switch vendors ratings, it's very likely that the receiver input
impedance is around 2 ohms.
(And just what sort of detector do
you have that represents a 2 ohm load?)
Cheers,
Tom
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