On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 04:25:59 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote:
Yes, you are correct - sorry. But it now seems that you understand
what I was trying to say. If one takes an ordinary G5RV and
installs a parallel 1000pf capacitor at the coax/twinlead junction,
one will raise the resonant frequency and lower the SWR on the
coax for 75m operation. Very close to 50+j0 ohms can be achieved
on 75m through that simple act. When I lived in AZ, I switched that
cap in automatically using a relay and the frequency output signal
on my IC-745.
OK.
I played around a bit using the feedpoint impedances that I modelled
for my "Feeding the G5RV" article. With 31' of 554, I needed about
2000pF to "tune" it for low 50 ohm VSWR at 3.6MHz.
I plotted the impedance presented to the coax for a range of
frequencies from 3.5 to 3.8MHz, they are at
http://www.vk1od.net/temp/G5RV-W5DXP.GIF . The Smith chart is
normalised to 50 ohms. The solution seems fairly narrow band, the VSWR
at 3.55 was 6, at 3.6 it was 1.3, and at 3.65 it was 5.
Of course, implementations will have slight differences in actual
feedpoint impedances, and the outcome is very sensitive to slight
differences in feedpoint Z. This "no-tuner" matching scheme will
probably need significant customisation for each implementation.
Owen
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