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Old October 6th 07, 01:39 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Roy Lewallen Roy Lewallen is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,374
Default Antennas guilty of RFI?

Dave Oldridge wrote:
"ZL2DG Dave" wrote in
:

I believe antenna feedlines can be a source of rfi.The radiation from
an antenna should be much greater than any feeder radiation_why the
emphasis on feeder radiation? 73 de ZL2DG


Because feeders often pass near consumer electronics.

If the feeder has no antenna currents on it (like my feeder years ago when
I had a vertical 250 feet out from the house), then the antenna, while
radiating much more than the feedline is far enough away that the inverse
square law protects the consumer electronics.

Of course this depends on antenna placement.


The improvement noted by increasing the distance between the radiating
conductor and the consumer electronics (or power or other wiring they're
connected to) can be much greater than an "inverse square law" would imply.

That's because a lot of the problems with interference occur in the near
field of the radiating conductor. In the far field, the field strength
is inversely proportional to the distance (the power density follows the
"inverse square law"). But in some parts of the near field, the field
strength varies as the inverse *cube* of the distance. So even a small
increase in distance can often have quite a dramatic effect on
interference level.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL