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Old January 3rd 06, 09:19 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna,sci.electronics.basics
Roy Lewallen
 
Posts: n/a
Default Dipoles and the rig's RF ground...

Dave Oldridge wrote:

Still, if the antenna is TRULY balanced (a situation that only rarely
actually happens), you won't get common-mode currents.


That's true only if by "balanced" you mean that the two feedline
conductors carry equal and opposite currents. In that case, common mode
current is zero by definition. But if you really mean symmetrical, as
most amateurs do when they say "balanced", you certainly can have common
mode current.

A detailed explanation of how that happens is in the article at
http://eznec.com/Amateur/Articles/Baluns.pdf, and the article by Walt
Maxwell, W2DU at http://www.w2du/r2ch21.pdf which is referenced at the
end of the first article? Note particularly figures 3 and 4 of the
Baluns.pdf article.

I've never had a
problem with them with well-grounded (from an RF standpoint) ground-
mounted verticals either.


The reason this provides balanced feedline currents is that the
impedance to ground at the base of the antenna is much less than the
impedance looking back from the feedpoint down along the outside of the
feedline. Consequently, the large majority of the current from the
inside of the coax shield flows to ground rather than down the outside
of the coax. And laying the coax on the ground keeps coupled common mode
current down.


Essentially this is why I recommend using open wire or twinlead and
feeding it through a proper balanced-line tuner.


That combination will produce a truly balanced system with no common
mode current. But it's not the only way.

. . .


Years ago, I built an
amplifier that literally had a balanced line output and fed a 600-ohm
feeder direct off two taps on its output coil. That feedline was only
ten feet long and I worked a TON of 80m DX an the inverted vee that it
connected to. And I could always tap the coil so as to have ZERO RF in
the shack (though my landlady's little 7.5 watt light bulbs used to light
on some frequencies when the house wiring picked up direct from the
antenna).