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Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
In article t3ali.3392$Y_3.570@trnddc04, "Woody"
wrote: Well.. a million thanks for that. Quite a cool history lesson as well. So now I'm looking for an SEA tuner... LOL... Listen, that all makes perfect sense but just to clarify, a.) now I know why that triton did so poorly when tested. We calc'd 1/2 wavelength for the longwire, and b.) Again, for continuity and clarity of this thread for future surfers...... what then, considering our discussed auto-tuners, would be the optimal length for a longwire that would be used for amateur/MARS, 3-30MHz? Pick 1/2wavelength on say 2.8Mhz and just cut it? Or calc 1/2wavelength on the lowest and add 5% or some arbitrary odd number?? Which plan will offer the least chance of dropping a 1/2wl further up the band on a desired frequency? thanks, Woody What we did, is to try and have a Longwire with a 1/4 Wave Point near the lowest Operating Frequency like for the 2006Khz Alaska Private Fixed Frequency, then calculate the Natural 1/2 Wave Point for that Wire, then adjust the 1/4 Wave Length, SHORTER, until the 1/2 Wave Point DeadBand (2.5% or so) was in a part of the speectrum the Station wasn't Licensed for, Marine and Alaska Private Fixed have specific Channels, and Bands in the MF/HF Spectrum, and it isn't to hard to move the DeadBand to a nonused portion of the Spectrum. For the HAMS, that want a "Do everything, cover the whole Dc to Light Spectrum, with one Longwire Tunter", the answer is "Design and Build your own Dam Tuner with an integrate Longwire Switch and put up Multiple lengths of wire", because there isn't a product out there, that I am aware, of that does this, YET.... Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
On Jul 9, 2:16 am, Richard Clark wrote:
Anything more convoluted is unlikely to give you more performance. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hi, Richard: Should you check with your legal counsel before you make that statement? Bill |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
Hey, I'm just learning and absorbing so anything new is a place for me to
start. Thanks again! woody "Owen Duffy" wrote in message ... "Woody" wrote in news:hYdli.29709$BT3.8034@trnddc06: Hi Owen. 5% was just a number picked out at random by me for clarification of my question. So you wouldn't want to share your 'sweet' findings, would you?? thanks! I had a dig around through a few thousand spreadsheets... and found it. 9.05m, 12.6m, 18.3m, 26.4m, 33.3m, 44.9m. If you want to cover 60m, leave the 26.4 out of the list. Did someone mention 60' (18.3m), it is in the list, but it is more critical than 26.4 or 12.6. As noted in my earlier post, if you want to be 10% or more away from n half waves on all bands, there is no solution. These calcs don't consider proximity of objects that may shift the tuning. My advice still stands that the higher order parallel resonances aren't such an issue, so this method unnecessarily constrains the solution.. Owen |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
Yep, amen to that! LOL...
woody "Denny" wrote in message ups.com... Yes, the history of the autotuners is fascinating... The discussion of integral half waves, parallel resonance impedences, ground impedences, etc., is meat and potatos for antenna freaks like me... BTW, in the older ARRL handbooks is a table of guy wire lengths (for towers) that avoid resonances in the ham bands... Those lengths would make an excellent guide for the length of a random wire antenna... It might also be in the new editions, but I haven't looked at one in recent years.. Anyway, that table will give you a good starting point... B U T , what I want you to do is to simply either cobble up an L match, or pick up a tuner (any tuner, automatic or not), run some wire any length through those trees, and get on the air! If the tuner has problems with any particular band, change the length of the wire by 4 to 12 feet until it tunes OK... Once you have a working antenna you can spend time and energy gilding the lily with just the 'perfect' length and configuration... Don't waste time over analyzing - pick a tuner, throw up some wire and ground radials, and operate... A local ham who lives in a trailor park is closing in on 300 countries confirmed and his only antenna for all this is a single multiband vertical, 21 feet tall, disguised as a flag pole... Just do it... cheers ... denny |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
LOL, and then there's that....
also a great idea! thanks much! Woody "Bruce in Alaska" wrote in message ... In article t3ali.3392$Y_3.570@trnddc04, "Woody" wrote: Well.. a million thanks for that. Quite a cool history lesson as well. So now I'm looking for an SEA tuner... LOL... Listen, that all makes perfect sense but just to clarify, a.) now I know why that triton did so poorly when tested. We calc'd 1/2 wavelength for the longwire, and b.) Again, for continuity and clarity of this thread for future surfers...... what then, considering our discussed auto-tuners, would be the optimal length for a longwire that would be used for amateur/MARS, 3-30MHz? Pick 1/2wavelength on say 2.8Mhz and just cut it? Or calc 1/2wavelength on the lowest and add 5% or some arbitrary odd number?? Which plan will offer the least chance of dropping a 1/2wl further up the band on a desired frequency? thanks, Woody What we did, is to try and have a Longwire with a 1/4 Wave Point near the lowest Operating Frequency like for the 2006Khz Alaska Private Fixed Frequency, then calculate the Natural 1/2 Wave Point for that Wire, then adjust the 1/4 Wave Length, SHORTER, until the 1/2 Wave Point DeadBand (2.5% or so) was in a part of the speectrum the Station wasn't Licensed for, Marine and Alaska Private Fixed have specific Channels, and Bands in the MF/HF Spectrum, and it isn't to hard to move the DeadBand to a nonused portion of the Spectrum. For the HAMS, that want a "Do everything, cover the whole Dc to Light Spectrum, with one Longwire Tunter", the answer is "Design and Build your own Dam Tuner with an integrate Longwire Switch and put up Multiple lengths of wire", because there isn't a product out there, that I am aware, of that does this, YET.... Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
On Fri, 13 Jul 2007 16:56:57 -0700, Bill wrote:
On Jul 9, 2:16 am, Richard Clark wrote: Anything more convoluted is unlikely to give you more performance. Should you check with your legal counsel before you make that statement? Talk about convolution. Plug your legal counsel in and see if DX pegs the S-Meter. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
In article ,
Richard Clark wrote: Talk about convolution. Plug your legal counsel in and see if DX pegs the S-Meter. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC No, Legal Counsel type folks are just one step Up the ladder from Politicos, and they are only good for starting Diesel Engines in very cold weather. Lots of HOT AIR, coming out of those guys..... but how to get them to Blow it down the Intake Manifold..... Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
"Denny" wrote in message ups.com... snip Don't waste time over analyzing - pick a tuner, throw up some wire and ground radials, and operate... A local ham who lives in a trailor park is closing in on 300 countries confirmed and his only antenna for all this is a single multiband vertical, 21 feet tall, disguised as a flag pole... Just do it... Yup. I'm on HF with a $50.00 used transceiver, a $5.00 pi-network tuner, some coax, a balun and two pieces of copper pipe laying on my roof. It ain't purty but I'm talking to people and they're talking back. "Sal" |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
You guys crack me up. The poor guy wanted a simple longwire solution.
I want one too, and that's how I found this thread. I read in W1FB's Antenna Notebook that you can take a 1 wavelength piece of wire, feed it with 75 Ohm coax 1/4 wavelength in from one end, with the hot side going to the 3/4 wavelength piece and the shield going to the 1/4 wavelength piece. It looks like you don't need any type of tuner. Has anybody tried that? I'm looking for a simple antenna for PSK-31 QRP that the homeowners association won't even see, and this looks like the deal, but I can't find any corroboration for the concept. Dave Morris N5UP www.eQSL.cc |
Need help... End-fed, long wire or ????
In article om,
wrote: I read in W1FB's Antenna Notebook that you can take a 1 wavelength piece of wire, feed it with 75 Ohm coax 1/4 wavelength in from one end, with the hot side going to the 3/4 wavelength piece and the shield going to the 1/4 wavelength piece. It looks like you don't need any type of tuner. Has anybody tried that? I'm looking for a simple antenna for PSK-31 QRP that the homeowners association won't even see, and this looks like the deal, but I can't find any corroboration for the concept. That sounds like a form of off-center-fed resonant doublet. Since the radiator is 1 wavelength long, it will have current maxima 1/4 away from each end (which is where you're feeding it). I'd guess that it will provide a reasonable (although imperfect) match to a 75-ohm coax... you might see an SWR of 2:1 or so on the coax. The impedance seen by the rig will depend on the length of the feedline, and a rig designed to drive a 50-ohm load might see a fairly low SWR, or perhaps one as high as 3:1 or 4:1 (at a guess). If your rig has a built-in ATU, it's probably adequate to flatten this sort of SWR down to the point where the rig's finals are happy with it. There's likely to be some amount of RF current present on the outside of the coaxial feedline, due both to conduction at the feedpoint and to induction from the wire (since the feedline is not located symmetrically in the center of the radiating element). If this causes sufficient "RF in the shack" to be a problem, you might want to add an isolating choke where the feedline enters the building... and if there isn't enough RF in the shack to cause problems, then don't worry about it. In either case, it's probably going to be less RF-in-the-shack than you'd get with an end-fed longwire, fed against the station ground or a counterpoise. Seems like a reasonable candidate for a "stealth" antenna, if you can conceal the coax running up to the feedpoint, and use a thin-gauge wire as a radiator (e.g. thin-gauge enamel-insulated magnet wire). -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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