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K7ITM wrote:
On Feb 14, 3:21 pm, ml wrote: I.....verse with it; it would work to fill a volume around the antenna. But to get the full effect, it should be a pretty large volume, containing the electric field in the neighborhood of the antenna. Not very practical. In coax, the electric field is between the wires; in the dipole, it's also between the wires, but the volume is very much larger. On the other hand, people have been shortening resonant antennas for a long time by increasing the inductance: thus, loading coils and "slinky" antennas. Similarly, people make "slow" coax by making the center conductor a helix, and thus make delay lines. Cheers, Tom ok what is a 'delay line'?? i would think that would just increase the surface area and therfore sorta increase performance Wikipedia gives a definition of delay line; a length of transmission line is technically a delay line, but often for longer delays, a special line is made in which the center conductor is a wire wound around a core (often of the same material as the dielectric between center and outer). The winding should be done with space between the turns, not close-wound, to give more uniform delay versus frequency. For a uniform TEM transmission line, the delay time is the square root of the total capacitance between the conductors times the total net inductance of the length of the conductors: Tau=sqrt(L*C). Many E&M texts go into how to accurately calculate the inductance and capacitance for coaxial line with straight conductors. In an antenna, you can increase the inductance by adding a lumped inductance, commonly called a loading coil, or you can replace the straight wire with a wire formed into a helix. Google "slinky antenna". You'll find lots of info. I'm not making any claims that a slinky antenna is either a good antenna or a poor one; it's just one way to make a shortened dipole or monopole antenna, or even a shortened Yagi. Cheers, Tom In the early days of computers they used to use a length of wire as temporary memory. At the start of a store cycle a piece of data would be input to the wire, after a period of time the data would come out and be placed into the computation. Admiral Grace Hopper used to give an example of time and delay in her speeches. She would say that one day she called down to the computer department and asked for a micro second. They sent her 1000 feet of wire. She then called down and asked for a nanosecond, they sent her one foot of wire. No point to this just a good story. Dave N |
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