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Richard Clark wrote:
"Uh-huh, makes a trap an antenna?" A trap usually isn`t the best radiator. A 1/4-wave shorted stub is electrically equivalent to a parallel resonant circuit, so they are interchangeable. You can use a parallel resonant circuit to replace a 1/4-wave shorted stub or vice versa. VHF collinear antenna arrays often use 1/4-wave shorted stubs to invert the phase at 1/2-wave intervals to keep the current going in the same direction in all elements. The Franklin antenna is a vertical collinear array used by some medium wave broadcasters. A 1/4-wave stub would be inconvenient for the medium wave broadcaster, so he sometimes uses a parallel resonant circuit for his phase inverter between 1/2-wave collinear elements. You might think the parallel resonant circuit or 1/4-wave shorted stub would function as a trap. Traps are used in multiband antennas. But the parallel resonant circuit does not function as a trap in collinear arrays. The length of the element beyond the tuned circuit is 1/2-wave resonant and readily accepts power through and around the tuned circuit. Not so with a trap. The length of the element beyond the trap is not resonant and accepts very little power. The trap is an isolator which keeps power out of the extension beyond the trap. The phase inverter is a coupler which conveys energy with a phase reversal produced by the inverter. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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