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Old January 2nd 10, 05:45 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Richard Clark Richard Clark is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Matching impedance on 900 MHz Yagi stacking harness

On Sat, 2 Jan 2010 09:08:16 -0800 (PST), mr1956
wrote:

I suppose my question is this: Is there a longer multiple of
wavelength I can use for the impedance matching 75 ohm sections to
develop a more practical design for what I need? Or, am I stuck with
the 2.1" length due to the frequency?


Hi Curt,

To answer your last question first: you can use odd multiples (1, 3,
5, 7...) if your initial computation was correct. Consider, if your
computation contains errors, they, too, will multiply.

Computations aside, a receiver rarely needs exact matching when "close
is good enough." Two 50 Ohm antennas in parallel or series are not
seriously off. The mismatch loss would probably amount to less than 1
dB whereas your using two crossed antennas is in an effort to recover
from the loss of polarization mismatch that can exceed 20 to 30 dB.

As a practical matter, have you tried testing these antenna issues at
ground level? There are certainly complications that ground proximity
can introduce (reflection from ground being principle among them). As
a first pass approximation, however, you can come to some feeling for
many issues without having to loft anything into the air. Insofar as
polarization mismatch goes, ground's proximity would tend to dilute my
suggestion as ground and anything that is in proximity would tend to
offer many reflections some of which don't come anywhere near your
final application.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC