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Old July 10th 06, 03:37 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
John - KD5YI John - KD5YI is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 43
Default Quarterwave vertical with radials

Sal M. Onella wrote:
"David" nospam@nospam wrote in message
...

A normal ground plane is a large sheet of metal that reflects the radio


wave

emitted by the radiating element. If there are four radials, each a
quarterwave long, do the radials form a ground plane? Or is there too much
of a gap for them to form a ground plane?



Effectively, yes.

A metallic surface (your "sheet of metal") can be replaced by a partially
metallic surface -- within limits. If you keep the size of any gap under
1/10 wavelength, the surface will appear solid. This I know from satellite
reflector work.

The use of four radials appears to be a compromise for using a solid
surface, but it obviously works. The RF sees these radial wires and behaves
like we want. I think adding more radials will always make a better
counterpoise, but I also think you reach the point of diminishing returns
pretty quickly. (We aren't the first ones to speculate about this, after
all :-)



Actually, on elevated antennas (as in the usual VHF setup), just two
quarter-wave radials 180 degrees apart is almost indistinguishable from 4 or
more radials. EZNEC shows very little change in terminal impedance and
pattern by removing two radials from a 4 radial ground plane.

I once used copper tape on a window to make a ground plane vertical like
that for 70cm. It worked very well.

Cheers,
John