Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am seriously lusting over the concept of putting together a
foursquare array of 40M verticals. I found the http://www.zerofive-antennas.com/ website and the antenna part looks do-able. If a bit heavy-duty! I think I have the space in the yard to put down the radials. The house gets in the way of one direction but I think I can put down at least quarter-wavelength radials from each base in all directions and half-wavelength or longer in some other directions. I have some old ARRL antenna handbooks with articles by Roy Lewallen about phasing arrays and measurements. I also have EZNEC. Is there something I can do to prove to myself that having my house on one side of the array and the edge of my lot on the other side of the array, resulting in a radial plane that's not radial but more like a rectangle, won't mess up the whole concept? And if I draw things out it looks like an 80M foursquare array would be possible but my house would be in the middle of it :-). Is this a recipe for disaster or would it actually work? (Not that I could afford four 75-foot vertical radiators from zerofive, but I can imagine!) Tim. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Mininec antenna computor programs and Gaussian arrays | Antenna | |||
Phasing Verticals | Antenna | |||
Has anyone ever designed a SW transmission system using curtan arrays that has a beamwidth of 2.5 to 5 degrees? | Shortwave | |||
Flagpole verticals | Antenna | |||
Phasing verticals | Antenna |