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#111
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art wrote:
You also have circulating current because of inherrant inductance and capacitance since we are dealing with a series circuit. Every real world network contains both inductance and capacitance. The circulating currents between them are maximum at resonance, i.e. when the reactances appear to disappear but they don't. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#112
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art wrote:
IIf you can design a bandpass filter in a RLC or complex circuitry method then you can design an antenna array that does the same thing. That is not out of the box thinking.Just remove coupling from the overall function Designing an RLC circuit is trivial. The equations are simple and well known to any 2nd year EE student. However, you need field theory and materials knowledge (among other things)to design an antenna. If you design an antenna only looking at ohm's law, you will never be successful. |
#113
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art wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: Remember only R is of consideration for the addition of power from each element which provides flux unless you can quantasize reaction for me as producing the emmision of flux other than a indication of the direction it takes . I agree there are other losses but to prevent including losses that are outside the E and H process change over such as ground reflections etc is it not better to just accept The pure resistance only so there is no need to characterize individual losses Once you go beyond the near field it gets complicated as losses are created outside the EH generation process. Ii am not sure how the EZNEC thing functions but if you design the array where all elements are driven you can then use the individual element impedances to determine overall efficiency.i.e. power in versus power out Fortunately thats the way my program can operate Art Does this mean you are ignoring any interaction between elements? |
#114
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Re "it does not agree...".When you look at the main characteristic of a
yagi antenna which is the gain of the main lobe and then compare it with the rest of the radiation field then I would say it is inefficient. I sure wish I had a picture of all the radiation vectors that go into the shaping of the field. I did a circular pattern array the other day where a circular cone was radiated vertically and I thought that was as close to a beam that I ever had seen but why it formed that way is a mystery. Frankly I feel the major need nowadays is a broard beam as possible for line of site use for wireless devices where the gain is constant for excess of 90 degrees coverage plus large bandwidth rather than a emphasis on gain itself Art Richard Fry wrote: "art" wrote in message Some time ago I mentioned how inefficient Yagi design antennas were thinking more in the way of how little of the radiation used got to its required direction. etc _________________ The above statement does not agree with the measured patterns and performance results of Yagi antennas. A well-designed, 6-element Yagi has a peak gain of at least 10 dBi, which means that it radiates about 6.3 times more power in that direction than if the same input power was radiated by a reference 1/2-wave dipole, and measured in its direction of maximum gain. RF |
#115
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Ofcourse they are.They are both resonant and have the same "Q" which is
equivalent to half power. Isnt that why we talk of a half power width of a main beam because of the assertion I just made. This is a excellent candidate for a complex circuit analysis since the Q is the same regardles of movement away from the resonant frequency and coupling is not a factor! Art Art Cecil Moore wrote: art wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Actually Art, adding reactance reduces the current in the element thus *decreasing* losses below what a resonant passive element would have. Pure reactance is lossless. This current that you are referring to, I used P =I squared R which leads to lower power. Where did I go wrong Lower power results in lowering the loss due to heat. That leaves more power available to be radiated by the antenna system but not necessarily radiated by this single element that we are discussing. I suspect two driven elements are theoretically capable of better performance than a two element Yagi given equal total power input into the elements. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#116
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Ofcourse they are.They are both resonant and have the same "Q" which is
equivalent to half power. Isnt that why we talk of a half power width of a main beam because of the assertion I just made. This is a excellent candidate for a complex circuit analysis since the Q is the same regardles of movement away from the resonant frequency and coupling is not a factor! Art Art Cecil Moore wrote: art wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Actually Art, adding reactance reduces the current in the element thus *decreasing* losses below what a resonant passive element would have. Pure reactance is lossless. This current that you are referring to, I used P =I squared R which leads to lower power. Where did I go wrong Lower power results in lowering the loss due to heat. That leaves more power available to be radiated by the antenna system but not necessarily radiated by this single element that we are discussing. I suspect two driven elements are theoretically capable of better performance than a two element Yagi given equal total power input into the elements. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#117
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Cecil Moore wrote:
The feedpoint impedance is 20 ohms and the current induced in the passive element is 0.84 amps. Cecil: Does Roy's program allow you to insert a reflector made of nickel-chromium wire. Stick one of those turkeys in there and see if that doesn't cut that 0.84 amps down a bit! grin Chuckling, JS |
#118
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art wrote:
Tom Ring wrote: art wrote: They are of a group that everything is known about antennas and is written in books. If you refer to something that is not in the books Art: If you refer to something that is "not in the books" one should take great care. Why I do think evidence can be brought out and can be demonstrated that some of the ways we "think" antennas are working is not real, however, great men have developed thinking models and formulas which are able to let us design and use WORKING antennas which are PRACTICAL. I site that mysterious 377 ohms as an example, or for another, incorporating the spin rate of the earth into antenna formulas (time), ridiculous (but useful!) But, those "old books" contain methods and means to develop antennas which do work and which do work well, we owe much to those who have gone before us ... I am only hoping that by refusing to allow "magic numbers" to be embedded into equations without any suitable explanation of what those numbers are "REALLY ABOUT" will one day awake the man who can form the vision and see what the others have all been unable to, Tesla seemed to have had an excellent ability which I hold as example of the type of "vision seer" I mean. I have an open mind, I guess you are as likely as the next guy to "be the one!" Never hurts to try anyway ... However, thank God practical antennas work and we have the tools to design and build them. Regards, JS |
#119
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I figure that if it works ok on my program AO PRO and it is then
checked out OK on NEC4 independently,and I can produce the electrical laws that backs it up it will get into the books tho for the present time it is not there now. For a very long time I have tried to introduce this and others to those who are experienced in that sort of thing but I could never get it off the ground because the thread kept on being changed to suit somebodies whim or it developed into a name calling setup that it was impossible to procede. Actually I let one patent application drop during the examination process because of the badmouthing that I got but my back is now stiffer and this one is going all the way. I do it not for money reasons but because antennas is my hobby despite my so called lack of knoweledge I have had patents during my working years at G.E. and other places so the idea of patents doesn't carry much with me any more. For all the experts we have had over the years on this newsgroup I have never been able to thrash out one of my ideas to fruition because of various nebulous reasons. If I brought one up involving SWR, coupling, baluns e.t.c. the thread will grow by leaps and bounds in minuits because everybody has something to say about it. If a subject is brought up that one cannot provide insight then that person feels denied that he cant post so he will resort to firing bullets and stones. Art John Smith wrote: art wrote: Tom Ring wrote: art wrote: They are of a group that everything is known about antennas and is written in books. If you refer to something that is not in the books Art: If you refer to something that is "not in the books" one should take great care. Why I do think evidence can be brought out and can be demonstrated that some of the ways we "think" antennas are working is not real, however, great men have developed thinking models and formulas which are able to let us design and use WORKING antennas which are PRACTICAL. I site that mysterious 377 ohms as an example, or for another, incorporating the spin rate of the earth into antenna formulas (time), ridiculous (but useful!) But, those "old books" contain methods and means to develop antennas which do work and which do work well, we owe much to those who have gone before us ... I am only hoping that by refusing to allow "magic numbers" to be embedded into equations without any suitable explanation of what those numbers are "REALLY ABOUT" will one day awake the man who can form the vision and see what the others have all been unable to, Tesla seemed to have had an excellent ability which I hold as example of the type of "vision seer" I mean. I have an open mind, I guess you are as likely as the next guy to "be the one!" Never hurts to try anyway ... However, thank God practical antennas work and we have the tools to design and build them. Regards, JS |
#120
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![]() "art" wrote in message ups.com... Interesting Jimmy Could you show me how me how a vector directed at a socalled reflector behaves with respect to a constant plane without the implication of a neutralising effect. Now the reflector "works" only as a part of a particular plane so please go on from there. I often read of additive and subtractive radiation in books written by the masters and I have seemed to have got the wrong idea about these matters Art Then give a reference to what you are talking about if you are so familar with the "masters". Jimmie D wrote: "art" wrote in message oups.com... From a theoretical way of getting at the answer it seems a logical way of proceding. So now to the rest of the task.1 how do we determine volumes that you talk about that are a result of deflection 2 How do we determine radiation that was cancelled or neutralised and 3 How do you determine the radiation volume created by ground reflection so we can work back to search for ground losses. That last one really bothers me as I have never got a good handle on the contribution of ground reflection to any particular part of the radiation envelope. Art Denny wrote: For those who wish to actually learn and not just insult each other, get a calculator, learn how to calculate Cosine Theta a trivial math problem that any 9th grader can be taught in 5 minutes flat, get a BIG piece of paper reason to come, and actually calculate the shape and vector length of the lobes of a two element Yagi-Uda antenna... Do the calculation in both the horizonal and vertical planes... From that you can calculate the volume of each lobe, which is proportional to the percentage of power in each lobe... From that number you can very simply calculate what percentage went into the lobes you prefer and what went in the lobes you don't prefer... Now, the reason for the BIG piece of paper... The antenna patterns you see on the screen with EZNEC, or in the antenna handbooks, are logarithmic, not linear and there are flavors to them, ARRL, linear logarithmic, modified logarithmic... So, the patterns are distorted... Why is that? Because if they were linear and the front lobe and the rear lobe are to the same scale the front lobe will take up the entire length of the screen/paper and the rear lobe will need a magnifying glass to be seen... A rear lobe that is 20dB down from the front lobe is down by the power ratio of 100... So, if your forward lobe calculates out to be 10 inches long, the rear lobe will be be 1/10 of an inch.... I'll let you figure out the size of a lobe that is 30dB down (get out your microscope) For those who want to review do a search on Joseph Reisert, who has published numerous writings on antennas and patterns... There many are others also, but Joe is published on the web, and very readable... cheers ... denny / k8do The radiation IS NOT cancelled or Neutralized. You need to learn more about what is going on with an antenna. I suggest you do some serious reading, actually reading with an open mind and not reading trying to find little phrases that seem to you to prove your beliefs. It should be fairly obvious that if an antenna worked by neutralization or cancelation that it would take more energy to cancel out radiation in the undesired direction of a yagi than is available in the desired direction. Therefore a Yagi or any other antenna does not work by cancellation. I gues I could express this a lot better but its late and whats the use. |
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