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The discussion(s) of ground planes, ground radials, etc, reminds me of an
antenna design that I saw about 20 years ago, when I was helping to establish a Navy shore facility in San Diego. We needed some HF antennas and researched existing building-mounted HF antennas in the area.. The research led us to a local entrepreneur who built a few antennas and sold them to the Navy. They worked well. The radiator was a Slinky-like coil that was raised inside a fiber tube, which I believe is the way the SteppIR tunes. To the point, the ground plane for this antenna was described to us as Log Spiral, a shape found in Nature from the curls of a conch shell up to the arms of a spiral galaxy. At a price of $14,000 per copy, our program could not afford his antenna and we made do with a base tuned whip. It worked. Because we never bought and installed the antenna, I've forgotten all the pertinent details of how many ground wires were involved, how long the wires were, how they were spaced, etc. I'm pretty much a blank slate. :-( What, if anything, do we know about the concept of a log spiral ground plane? Genius or snake oil or something in-between??? Google is no help. The closest I got was a log spiral HF antenna for NVIS operation described by L.B. Cebik, W4RNL, cited often here. But then, that's the _antenna_, not the counterpoise. It's tempting to imagine that the dimensions of that antenna might be the dimensions for a corresponding counterpoise. 73, "Sal" (KD6VKW) |
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