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#1
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I came across the KE2QJ antenna matching network for HF mobile
operation in the 2004 ARRL handbook and it looks interesting. It is designed to match a vertical whip which is not loaded itself, and uses a lower value coil at the base and theoretically should result in higher efficiency than the conventional loading method. Does anyone have any experience with it? -- Bill, W6WRT |
#2
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Bill Turner wrote:
It is designed to match a vertical whip which is not loaded itself, and uses a lower value coil at the base and theoretically should result in higher efficiency than the conventional loading method. For those of us who don't have the 2004 ARRL Handbook, could you describe the theory? If it is based on the old wives' tale that the current through a loading coil is constant, it is all wet. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#3
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ORIGINAL MESSAGE:
On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 19:40:35 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote: For those of us who don't have the 2004 ARRL Handbook, could you describe the theory? If it is based on the old wives' tale that the current through a loading coil is constant, it is all wet. ------------ REPLY FOLLOWS ------------ No, this is not that type of circuit. This uses a simple vertical whip without any loading coil. At the base of the whip there is a variable coil and variable capacitor in parallel with each other and connected to ground. From the junction of the whip and coil/cap there is another capacitor which goes to the input of a 4:1 unun which steps up the resultant 12.5 ohm impedance to 50 ohms, which goes to the transceiver. For 3.5 MHz, the values in his example are 44 uH for the coil and 11.9 pH for the cap which feeds the unun. The value of the variable cap in parallel with the coil is not specified. He states that exact values of all components are highly dependent on coil Q. I see two major advantages to this network: 1. The whip itself is as simple as it can be; no loading coil at all. 2. The value of the coil at the base is smaller that a conventional loading coil would be. One drawback, although the author does not state it, is both capacitors must see a LOT of voltage, and vacuum variables would probably be necessary. At the 100 watt level, I'd guess the voltage there is on the order of 2-4 kV, possible more. If anyone is interested, email me at my qrz.com address and I'll send a screenshot of the circuit and the text of the article. -- Bill, W6WRT |
#4
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Bill Turner wrote:
2. The value of the coil at the base is smaller that a conventional loading coil would be. I'll send for the schematic but it sounds like he has a resonant circuit at the base. If so, he has increased the current through the coil considerably and losses in the coil are proportional to I^2. Reducing the size of the coil doesn't help if you increase the current through it. Sounds like he is forcing self-resonance in the coil by adding external capacitance. That cannot be a good thing for efficiency. I'd like to see his design up against a good screwdriver at a 75m mobile shootout. Consider that moving a center-loaded coil to the base of the antenna allows the coil to be made smaller but the overall losses in the system increase considerably. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#5
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ORIGINAL MESSAGE:
On Tue, 05 Sep 2006 14:57:15 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote: I'll send for the schematic but it sounds like he has a resonant circuit at the base. If so, he has increased the current through the coil considerably and losses in the coil are proportional to I^2. Reducing the size of the coil doesn't help if you increase the current through it. Sounds like he is forcing self-resonance in the coil by adding external capacitance. That cannot be a good thing for efficiency. I'd like to see his design up against a good screwdriver at a 75m mobile shootout. Consider that moving a center-loaded coil to the base of the antenna allows the coil to be made smaller but the overall losses in the system increase considerably. ------------ REPLY FOLLOWS ------------ I believe you are correct. This would be an expensive system to implement and perhaps not as efficient as a traditional system. It would be interesting to do a shootout. As he states, one of the main advantages is having a whip with no loading coils, even on 75 meters. -- Bill, W6WRT |
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