Thread: loop antennas
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Old June 15th 12, 05:09 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Szczepan Bialek Szczepan Bialek is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Oct 2009
Posts: 707
Default loop antennas


"Ian" napisał w wiadomości
...
"Szczepan Bialek" wrote in message
...


Hello, and they are most certainly not "electric" waves.


For the all Fathers of the radio they are the electric waves.
You wrote: "Hams have designed and constructed novel and practical
antennas over the years but their explanations about how they work are
often just plain wrong."

Could you give as the correct explanation?
S*


Hello Szczepan.

We've tried to assist you but you seem to prefer to stay with 19th century
knowledge


In 1846 Faraday wrote: "It seems to me, that the resultant of two or more
lines of force is in an apt condition for that action which may be
considered as equivalent to a lateral vibration; whereas a uniform medium,
like the aether, does not appear apt, or more apt than air or water."
http://www.padrak.com/ine/FARADAY1.html

rather than learn modern knowledge.


In 1929 Tesla wrote: " On repeating the Hertz experiments with much improved
and very powerful apparatus, I satisfied myself that what he had observed
was nothing else but effects of longitudinal waves in a gaseous medium, that
is to say, waves, propagated by alternate compression and expansion. He had
observed waves in the ether much of the nature of sound waves in the air."
http://www.tfcbooks.com/tesla/1929-09-22.htm

If you ask for help and don't accept the answers you get then there's not a
lot we can do ... other than disregard your postings and go and operate our
radio stations.


If you have a trouble in explanation about how receiving antennas work use
the Faraday's and Tesla's explanation.

You need to get a modern textbook on radio theory. One suitable for
amateur radio should be okay. Have a look at www.rsgb.org.and www.arrl.org


Is it right?
"Hams have designed and constructed novel and practical
antennas over the years but their explanations about how they work are
often just plain wrong."
S*