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Old February 13th 14, 10:44 AM posted to uk.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.antenna
gareth gareth is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2012
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Default The Texas Bugcatcher and capacity hats

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On Thursday, February 13, 2014 4:09:53 AM UTC-6, gareth wrote:
My reasoning is that because the waves spread out in all directions
in the hat, then there is no, or very little, radiation from the hat
because
of field cancellation, but when the waves all return simultaneously to
the
main element, they have incurred a phase change that you'd get had there
been a capacitor in circuit?

(Always willing to learn more, and to be corrected if my thought
experiment has gone up a blind alley, or in this case, a capacity hat
alley!)


The use of the hat has two main purposes.
#1, it will reduce the number of turns needed with the loading
coil, assuming the whip is shorter than 1/4 wave including the
hat.
#2, and probably most important. It improves the current
distribution through the length of the whip and makes the current
distribution a good bit more linear from the base to the tip.
I don't use one myself, because they catch a lot of wind, and
they look ugly on a vehicle. :/
I compromise by mounting the loading coil as high as possible,
which also helps current distribution.


Yes, all very well, and not disputed, but I was interested in a
discussion of how it actually works at the physics level?