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Owen Duffy wrote:
wrote in news ![]() I recently built a modified vertical dipole from wire and using a pole and trees as supports. I had hoped it would work on 2 bands 75 and 40 but it only works on one 75 where the VSWR is 1.3:1 and the bandwidth is 85 khz for the 2:1 points. On 40 meters the VSWR is over 10:1 so I thought I could use a 1/4 coax matching section 50 ohms but this doesnt solve the problem either as the VSWR doesnt change much with the extra coax section. The feedpoint impedance of a full wave dipole is likely to be in the region of 4000 ohms. its half wave A quarter wave transformer needs to be of Zo (50*4000)^0.5 or 447 ohms. You will not find a practical coax line with such Zo. If you for instance used a quarter wave of RG58C/U for a transformer, the input impedance would be 2 ohms (VSWR=25) (taking into account the 5+dB of loss in the transformer. Both the length and the Zo of a quarter wave transformer are important to its operation. Does this help to explain the results you observed? maybe I should have asked does my coax tune my antenna??????? Owen I did cut the section properly as the velocity factor for the coax is .78% which gave me 26.825 ft. Not sure what I am doing wrong or assuming - but looks like I could use some input. -- I SPILLED SPOT REMOVER ON MY DOG..............AND NOW HES GONE!! |
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