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"Zommbee" wrote in
: Hello all - I hope someone can help me figure this one out: .... Dave, I guess that you are hoping that with radials sloped down at 45 deg, you should approach a 50 ohm feedpoint at resonance. My experience is that sloping the radials tunes them high, in other words, they need to be a little longer than were they are 90 deg to the vertical element. Try clipping a short length of wire (say a couple of feet) to the ends of the radial, just hanging down, and see what it does to the feedpoint impedance. You can slide them away from the end to lessen the effect. The outcome might just give you a hint of what needs to be done. Remember, measure twice, cut once! Re the tuner loss, they should be very low for the VSWR you have discussed. Nevertheless, if you planned to have an antenna that shouldn't need a tuner, I can understand why you might want to pursue the reasons why or why not. It is an excuse for learning or frustration, depending on your point of view. As a matter of principle, I avoid using tuners like the '440's, they are the achilles heel of those radios when the relays become unreliable. BTW, one of the techniques for obtaining a match to 50 ohm feedline from a groundplane antenna is to tune it a little high, and shunt the feedpoint with an inductor or s/c stub. I drafted some notes on the topic at http://www.vk1od.net/QWVmatch/QWVmatch.htm . This is probably not the answer to your problem, since your 45 deg radials should lift the feedpoint Z close enough to 50 ohms and closer than VSWR=1.5 that you are observing right now. Owen |
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