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Cecil wrote,
Tdonaly wrote: Cecil wrote, If the pancake coil is in the horizontal plane, it will probably radiate horizontally polarized radiation and probably straight up. It might. Do you want to tell us why you think so, Cecil? Just off the top of my head - since the coil exists essentially only in the horizontal plane, the radiation from the coil is likely to be horizontal. If it is mobile, it is a very low antenna. Very low horizontal radiation usually tends to result in an NVIS radiation pattern in the far field. Hope there are no bugs in that logic. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp The only way to be sure is to make or model this thing. I'd like to make a point or two, though. 1. Since it's a coil, and a small one at that, it would need current in order to make the B field which would produce the horizontal E field which would define its polarity. The fact that it would be small and placed at the end of the antenna makes me think it would be starved for current. 2. Since one end of the coil isn't attached to anything, all it could do would be to accumulate and release charge. This would create a changing E field, the lines of which, would end on the vehicle. Since these lines would be roughly vertical, they might produce some (probably undetectable) advantage in the radiation field. 3. A real capacitance hat would probably do a much better job and be easier to make. (How do you keep a flat coil from jiggling and bouncing around like a clock spring as you're driving down the road?) 4. You might be better off thinking about ground losses in order to improve your signal. Maybe a bigger truck would help. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH, COW (Certified Old Wife) |
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