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On Feb 28, 12:29 am, Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
Jim wrote: I'll bet the hardware cost of a electronically steered phased array for HF suitable for ham use is comparable to the hardware cost of a big tower, rotator, and Yagi.. the phased array just isn't available as an off the shelf product yet. The fully steerable phased array that can also handle 1.5kW TX power is not available as a HAM product off the shelf yet... but we can already see where the future is headed. --------- snip ---------- It's all down to the magic phasing box at the centre of the array. Whatever goes into that box will be hard to design, complicated to control, and expensive to build... but most four-square owners would be happy to have even a fraction of those extra capabilities. I think it might be a bit of time before it's an off the shelf product (lack of demand is part of the reason). It also depends a bit on just how good you want the performance to be (null depth, primarily.. forward gain is not very sensitive to phasing and amplitude accuracy), and whether you want to make it an antenna system that just hooks onto an existing rig and PA, essentially hanging off a single feedline, or whether a higher level of integration is desirable or feasible. (for instance, rather than power combining a bunch of solid state amp modules like the current kilowatt class SSPAs do, put a power module on each antenna) "the magic box in the center of the array" is more the former model, and while simple conceptually, in the long run probably isn't the best way to solve the problem in a system context. For instance, a multi channel receiver, which can do all the phasing, very precisely, at low levels, either with analog or digital processing, can give you the nice deep nulls and adaptation.For TX, though, null depth isn't as important as maximizing the power squirted in the right direction. Hardware wise, the design isn't particularly complicated (any of the current crop of automatic antenna tuners can serve as the building block). Hard to control is mostly a matter of calibration and the right algorithms (and, yes, non trivial, but so is building a tetrode or FET power amp that's stable from 10 to 160, etc.). Expensive is more a matter of "compared to what".. You can buy a kilowatt autotuner for $500, so, assuming you needed 8 of them to control 4 elements (a single L network can only give you 90 degrees of phase shift, and you need 180).. that's $4K. Probably need some relays and transformers, as well as controller. I'd figure $6K, today.. But that's "off the shelf" assemblies. and not purpose designed. Start comparing that to the $10K to put up a tower and a Yagi (comparing new prices to new prices, plus building permits, etc.) and the phased array starts to be competive. So.. not today, but I'd figure that in 10 years, you'll start to see real broadband phased arrays (not just 4-8 switched beams in a single band like a 4 square). They provide a real solution to restricted space installations, if nothing else, because you can make effective use of the "volume" of space within a small suburban lot (i.e. the max theoretical gain from an antenna that fits in a box that's say, 15x30x10 meters is pretty high). Jim, W6RMK |
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