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Rick (W-A-one-R-K-T) wrote:
I'm aware of the B&W "radiating dummy load" (TTFD) antennas but I'm not quite ready to give up that much efficiency and I'm DEFINITELY not ready to blow $300 on one. I think you need to rethink this. A T2FD antenna is a radiating dummy load on frequencies that it is not really cut for. A squashed rombic is more accurate. On frequencies near resonance it is mostly antenna, as the resonance drops it becomes an oddly shaped feedline with a dummy load on the end. The T2FD was developed by the U.S. Navy and is a popular millitary and government antenna. The B&W one is designed for that market, you can make one very easily from copper wire, strips of insulating material and some resistors. The requirement for the resistor is that it be around 600 ohms and non resonant, so depending upon exactly what you transmit with, and how you transmit, the power requirment may be less than you think. The resisitor must be able to withstand the peak power and the average power. Carbon resistors tend to withstand much higher peaks for very short times than they are rated. Average power is often far less than peak, for example while AM and RTTY will heat the resistors far more than other modes, CW and SSB will not. One figure I read was 12%. One book, I have is Practical Wire Antennas, by John Heys, which discusses it in simple, easy to make terms. The book seems to out of print, replaced by Practical Wire Antennas 2 ISBN 1-905086-04-0. I think it came from his book, but I remember a high power resistor made from a combination of low power resistors in a series parallel form. I'm sure you could build one for far less than $300, most of the money going to the resistor and if you decided to buy one, a 9:1 balun. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM IL Voice: (07)-7424-1667 U.S. Voice: 1-215-821-1838 Visit my 'blog at http://geoffstechno.livejournal.com/ |
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