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On Jul 30, 10:04 am, Danny Richardson wrote:
Not true. Feeding an antenna with coax does not remove the need for a station ground and here's why: http://k6mhe.com/sub/BlancedFeedLine.pdf Danny,K6MHE The coax has nothing to do with it. Whether or not the antenna is complete will be a much more deciding factor. But still, I see nothing in the pdf that would imply a ground is needed for feeding such an antenna, coax fed or not. Only decoupling of the feedline is needed. Not a shack ground. Why would one "need" a station ground in that case, assuming the feedline is decoupled? How would adding a station ground improve operation of a "complete" antenna that was not well decoupled? Myself, I would consider that a "bandaid" approach to the common mode problem. A ground can hide problems in some cases, but it never actually fixes anything. Common mode problems should never be "cured" by station "RF" grounding. MK |
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