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#1
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Adding elements of the same length to a dipole does not produce much
benefit, while in contrast adding more elements as radials to a quarterwave vertical antenna produces a lot of benefit. Many books claim that the radials of a quarterwave vertical antenna form an image. It is said that the greater the number of radials, the more 'perfect' this image is and the greater the efficiency. In contrast, adding elements of same length to dipole increases bandwidth and creates an unusual radiation pattern e.g. fan dipole. 2 theories on vertical groundplane antenna a 1) Radials reflect radio wave emitted by vertical radiating element. Radials form a ground plane to reflect radio wave. Image theory applies where radials form a 'mirror' image. 2) Radials are simply conductors carrying current, and radiate accordingly. But they are placed and fed so this radiated wave nearly cancels. Radials do not form a flat metal conductor many wavelengths in diameter. Radials do not reflect the wave emitted by vertical. The radials are too short to reflect the wave radiated by vertical. With elevated radials, the radials are normally a quarter wavelength long. If the radials are proper current carrying conductors instead of a metal reflector, the radials will transform the high impedance at open circuit end to a low impedance at base of antenna. Low impedance means antenna is current fed. If the radials are made a half-wavelength long or longer, does the impedance and SWR of the antenna stay the same? Are there any tests to prove which of the above 2 theories is right? |
#2
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"David" wrote
2 theories on vertical groundplane antenna a clip Are there any tests to prove which of the above 2 theories is right? ___________ See paper 4 at http://rfry.org/Software%20&%20Misc%20Papers.htm . |
#3
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2006 15:06:46 -0000, "David" nospam@nospam wrote:
Adding elements of the same length to a dipole does not produce much benefit, Hi David, Benefit is in the eye of the beholder. Additional elements (I presume you mean length) bring gain in some directions and nulls in others. If by adding elements you mean in parallel (AKA fan dipole), then you stand to benefit in bandwidth coverage. If by adding elements you mean stacking them |||| then you are describing a primitive beam array which has classic benefits (once you attend other details of length and separation). while in contrast adding more elements as radials to a quarterwave vertical antenna produces a lot of benefit. This is something of the double-shuffle. What you stand to benefit from is you are reducing loss, and arguably loss that the dipole does not suffer from (although there is a lot of room in that statement for equivocation). Many books claim that the radials of a quarterwave vertical antenna form an image. Many books are useful for leveling tables too. It is said that the greater the number of radials, the more 'perfect' this image is and the greater the efficiency. This "image" and efficiency are two wholly different considerations. True, these considerations flow from the same design, but one is an electrical issue of matching and load, whereas the second is what in the science of Optics is called ray-tracing. In contrast, adding elements of same length to dipole increases bandwidth and creates an unusual radiation pattern e.g. fan dipole. 2 theories on vertical groundplane antenna a 1) Radials reflect radio wave emitted by vertical radiating element. Radials form a ground plane to reflect radio wave. Image theory applies where radials form a 'mirror' image. That is a fairly jejune theory as applied to antennas. You need only consider yourself as being that vertical radiator standing on a literal mirror that is no wider than you are tall. Look down into that mirror and what do you see? The sky above. Not a very compelling benefit when you are trying to see the horizon, is it? How big a mirror would you have to stand on to see, say, 10 degrees above the horizon in it? That mirror would be quite large, probably 20 times your height. 2) Radials are simply conductors carrying current, and radiate accordingly. This is quite true. But they are placed and fed so this radiated wave nearly cancels. Again, quite true. Radials do not form a flat metal conductor many wavelengths in diameter. Radials do not reflect the wave emitted by vertical. The radials are too short to reflect the wave radiated by vertical. As I've responded to point 1 above. With elevated radials, the radials are normally a quarter wavelength long. As a specific statement, yes, but not generally so. Drooping radials are more useful (benefit) but are not the same length as orthogonal radials. If the radials are proper current carrying conductors instead of a metal reflector, the radials will transform the high impedance at open circuit end to a low impedance at base of antenna. Wire or metal reflector is the same. Wire radials are simply a poor approximation (or better by degrees as the count of radials increases). Low impedance means antenna is current fed. If the radials are made a half-wavelength long or longer, does the impedance and SWR of the antenna stay the same? No. Are there any tests to prove which of the above 2 theories is right? Common sense comes to mind; however, it is the common sense that is found with experience and a solid base of physics. A quick path to that experience comes with modeling [sic, quick is quite variable]. The confusion of radials as being abstractions of Earth is found in the blur between matching and propagation. Earth and radials are principal actors in those activities, but unless you stand to plant an extremely huge radial field, there are different mechanisms at work. Clearly, the association of Earth with matching portends loss. In this sense more radials shields the fields from that loss and this can be achieved in the near distance of the antenna. However, you can achieve the same benefit with fewer radials by simply increasing the distance between the antenna and lossy earth: lift the antenna up. When we speak of Earth as a reflector of waves (the propagation side of the coin of antenna transmission), it is the degree of mismatch between the wave in space and the wave in Earth at a distance that bounces the wave at a shallow angle toward the horizon. This point will be 10s of wavelengths away from the antenna. The wave in a medium of 377 Ohms (free space) meets the ground medium of several hundred Ohms to as low as 10s of Ohms (sandy conditions to swampy conditions). Here, it is a simple matter of the mechanics of SWR. 377:25 (or 15:1) has a huge reflection component. That is why you want to live next to water (but not in it, which is another misconception that is born of the confusion between matching and propagation). If you live next to a desert, you might experience a condition of 377:250 (or 1.5:1) and your signal is plunging right into the dunes, never to be reflected with any great benefit. The paradox of this is that planting your vertical into the sand is the best of all worlds (when you consider the proximal loss of earth). Moral of this tale: Erect the vertical (with a few radials) on a tall sand dune near the sea. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#4
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Both theorys are wrong...
I am adding an element to a dipole, this afternoon... I expect significant benefits... I am not adding any radials to my vertical antenna as there will be no measureable benefit... denny / k8do |
#5
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On 12 Nov 2006 08:14:37 -0800, "Denny" wrote:
Both theorys are wrong... Hi Denny, I am adding an element to a dipole, this afternoon... I expect significant benefits... Expectation is described in terms of a belief system. Many adherents to belief systems stand the risk of disappointment, but that does not invalidate any particular theory, only the belief (a very subjective thing). Many adherents to belief systems find solace in their beliefs alone (without any further attempt to quantify). I am not adding any radials to my vertical antenna as there will be no measureable benefit... No "measurable" benefit is described in terms of ability. Many are unable, but their shortfall in capability, too, does not invalidate any particular theory (doesn't validate it either). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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