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Old February 23rd 07, 04:16 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
K7ITM K7ITM is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Shielded loop operation

On Feb 22, 12:23 pm, Owen Duffy wrote:
G'day all,

I am trying to work through the magical claims that are made of shielded
loops. My interest in mainly their use for field strength measurement,
but understanding them in a general sense is the place to start.

I have not found a detailed description of operation in my text books.
The ARRL does contain information, but it is inconsistent and IMHO
sometimes just plain wrong.

I have drafted an article with a proposed explanation of the operation
of a small single turn untuned shielded receiving loop. The article is athttp://www.vk1od.net/shieldedloop/index.htm.

Am I on the wrong tram?

Comments appreciated.

Owen


Hi Owen,

I have no time at the moment to read your draft, but I can tell you
that there is a very good qualitative explanation in King, Mimno and
Wing, "Transmission Lines, Antennas and Waveguides." I have a PDF of
the antennas chapter... I also know that in Johnson and Jasik there's
a corresponding explanation with a bit more detail. In a nutshell, in
the so-called shielded loop antenna, the antenna is the outer surface
of the outer conductor, and the feedpoint is the gap in this
conductor. The center conductor is merely a transmission line to
conduct the signal from the feedpoint to where it is used. It is
balance that yields the "magical properties," and it is possible to
build an antenna with good balance without making the loop out of
coaxial cable. The magical properties are generally taken to be
rejection of nearby electric fields (not electromagnetic fields), and
a symmetrical pattern.

Cheers,
Tom