oh god. here we go again. I didn't SAY that "RF flows into the antenna
mast". Read the post again.
"Cecil Moore" wrote in message
...
Zombie Wolf wrote:
A "ground plane" antenna is designed to 'fool" the antenna into thinking
the
horizontal radials are actually the surface of the earth. This term
actually
has nothing to do with grounding the antenna. However, the antenna will
work
better if the mast of it is grounded, since this gives the radials an
actual
earth ground reference electrically, and it therefore will work more
closely
to it's design specs.
Why would RF currents flowing in the mast make the
antenna work better? Wouldn't that be about the
same as common-mode transmission line currents?
--
73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp
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