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On 7 jun, 23:50, "Nick" wrote:
I am wanting to experiment making vertical whips, end fed, for a number of frequencies from HF through to UHF and was wondering if someone can point me to a link with designs for constructing these. I want to feed with 50 ohm co-ax for convenience, and I think it basically has to resonate at the design frequency, tapped for 50 ohms to feed it and present a "high impedance" to the end of the resonant element. Naturally there will be different designs required for UHF frequencies compared to HF frequencies for mechanical considerations and I guess different matching networks with different Q's will have pros and cons too.. Anyone with some links / info would be greatly appreciated Thanks Nick Hi nick, When you want to be ground plane independent, a halve wave resonance is the best option. It does introduce ground currents, but far less with respect to 1/4 or 5/8 WL. Please note, that you still need some ground, but a motor cycle frame will be sufficient. When you want to have full benefit of the HW, you must assure that it resonates as a half wave (so it will be shorter then an physical half wave). I would recommend familiarizing yourself with an EM simulation program. It may save you a lot of experimenting (with negative results). While the center fed impedance of a HW dipole is not strongly depending on thickness of radiator, the end fed impedance is. An HF whip (5m for 10m) will be somewhat below 1 kOhm, however a UHF thick whip (5mm/70cm band) over a small groundplane will be in the 500 Ohms range. The disadvantage of the HW end-fed is his length. When you want to make it shorter (for example the coil or helix construction), its end- fed impedance increases significantly. When you halve the length (but keep halve wave resonance), you may expect a factor 2...4 increase in impedance. About matching. Mechanically, end-fed matching is easiest, you can put the ground to the motor cycle frame. Elevated feeding gives low feed impedance, but you also have to include a common mode (balun) function. For end-feed, you may use an LC section (L in series with coax, C parallel to antenna), wound transformer, or combination of both. I assume that you have some means to measure VWSR and or impedance and don't touch the ends with there is relative high voltage.... Best regards, Wim PA3DJS |
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