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On Wed, 13 Dec 2006 22:44:38 -0000, "David" nospam@nospam wrote:
The books also say If antenna is horizontal and close to ground plane, the image cancels out wave emitted by antenna. Hi David, Your sources are pretty crummy. This information is quite in contradiction with the operation of a halfwave horizontal a quarterwave above earth, isn't it? A simple EZNEC model will reveal this clearly. Is this what happens in real life? Umm, no. It is known that if the 2 conductors of twin feeder are close together, the fields cancel out and there is very little radiation. Not the same thing. Are you saying that electromagnetic theory is wrong? Who is "you?" What about fibre optic cable? If ordinary glass strands were used, when the cable was bent, the light would be blocked and not travel any further. I've worked with a lot of fiber optics, and that statement simply doesn't make much sense. Ordinary and un-ordinary glass (as well as plastic) strands work differently by degree, not differently by theory. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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