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![]() Agreed except the only properly built and installed antennas exist in text books and free space. For the antenna itself (forgetting for the moment the transmission line) it would have to be installed in a completely balance environment. Yard clutter such as buildings, trees, powerlines and etc. would have identical geometry in relation of your balanced antenna - something that does exist in the real world. Plus ground conditions under and near the antenna will vary. So there will be some unbalance. Next add the transmission line. Have you ever seen a ham station whose transmission line ran perfectly perpendicular from the antenna to the transmitter? In other words, there will be some unbalance the only question is how much, 73, Danny, K6MHE Hi Danny: You are of course correct, but with RF in the shack problems levels are important. If the level of RF is below some threshold it causes no harm. Almost all Ham stations operate just fine with low levels of unbalance and other defects in the antennas. Just for interest sake I ran some numbers on a model ground system. Let’s assume you have a perfect ground system and you connect to it from the shack on the second floor using 12' of #6 wire. And it runs in a straight line, no bends or curls. The self inductance of that wire is about 56.22uHy. So what will be the reactance of that wire at 3.5 MHz? Doing the math I get 1,235.7ohms. At the other extreme 28MHz, I get 9,886.52ohms. These are numbers that hardly make me confident that I have any kind of a RF ground. By the way at 60Hz the reactance is 0.021ohms that I think is a good ground. Please excuse me for harping on this, but I run the electronics shop in the Physics dept at Penn State University. I'm constantly seeing many meter long thin wires tied to some cold water pipe or something in a lab that is supposed to get rid of all the high frequency noise in some experiment and it has no chance of helping. If physics grad students have problems understanding grounding it's no wonder that Ham’s do too. John Passaneau W3JXP |
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