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dykesc wrote:
I'm fairly new here so if this post is not appropriate for this group, direct me elsewhere. I am using the EZNEC demo to analyze an Off Center Fed sloper I am using on 75m. The antenna is being fed with 85 feet of 450 ohm ladder line which runs all the way to my operating location. At 3.9405 Mhz, EZNEC shows an impedance of 28.11 -j102.2 at the transmission line input (Alt Z0 of 450 ohms). My MFJ auto tuner (L-Network) is actually matching the sloper at a 1.1 SWR with an inductor value of 5.34 uH and a capacitor value of 605 pf. The capacitor is shunted on the transmitter side of the inductor. I'm afraid that your model isn't adequate for the antenna. In an off center fed antenna, there will be considerable common mode feedline current -- in other words, the currents on the two feedline conductors won't be equal and opposite, so the feedline will radiate and is an integral part of the antenna. A model has to include the feedline (as two wires, not as a transmission line model which doesn't radiate) in the correct orientation relative to the antenna, plus the entire path to ground from the transmitter. This path is seldom known. A simpler model which ignores the very significant contribution of the radiating feedline won't give meaningful results. I am using a formula I found in the L-Network section of Chapter 25 of the ARRL Antenna Book to take the MFJ tuner values above and calculate the impedance the tuner is matching. There are a couple of statements in this section of the Antenna Book which lead me to believe that L- Networks are used for matching purely resistive loads. This is not at all true. I'm guessing you're misinterpreting what's written there. If not, and it really says that, it's an error which should be corrected. It also states that loads containing "reactance" can be accounted for in the L- Network inductor or capacitor values. Do I need to eliminate the portion of the tuner inductor value being used to bring the system to resonance before I calculate the impedance transform? If so is there a way to do this or is my whole approach here off base? L network values for matching are best done by beginning with the required impedances at both ports, then directly calculating the necessary component values. A number of programs are available to do this calculation for you, or if you prefer, it can be done quite easily graphically with a Smith chart. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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