In article ,
 W5DXP  wrote:
 On Thursday, September 26, 2013 12:08:20 AM UTC-5, John S wrote:
  Very short and it is highly inductive.
  Longer is less inductive.
 
 John, the inductive reactance of an ideal shorted stub is a tangent function 
 that increases from zero at zero length up to a maximum on the Smith Chart as 
 the length approaches 1/4WL (undefined at 1/4WL). The equivalent inductance 
 is proportional to the inductive reactance so - very short and it is slightly 
 inductive (low reactance). Longer is more inductive (up to 1/4WL).
Agreed. So the inductive susceptance of a short shorted stub will be 
high, while the inductive susceptance of a longer (but less than a 
quarter wavelength) shorted stub will be low. Put that longer stub in 
parallel with a dipole a little bit shorter than a half wave long (and 
thus with a small amount of capacitive reactance and a large amount of 
capacitive susceptance) and the net result comes out capacitive. This is 
what I meant when I said that a shorted stub a bit too long to resonate 
the (too short) dipole makes the whole thing will come out capacitive, 
whereas if the stub is a bit too short for resonance, the whole thing 
will come out inductive.
David, VE7EZM and AF7BZ
-- 
David Ryeburn
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