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Active receive 4 square and others
In doing some study of active receiving antennas I see in a couple of
white papers on the subject that the author determined he needed a specific phase shift between one or more of the elements and the combiner, such as 110 degrees, so he proceeded to cut a specific length of coax determined by it's velocity factor X the desired fraction of a wave... This is one of those things that you always accept at face value in a published work, but this time my doubting side kicked in... We know that simply inserting a nominal electrical length of coax - such as 90 deg or 180 deg - into phased transmit arrays does not work as planned most of the time due to mutual coupling... I have read the contributions of Roy and Al Christman, et. al. on this not intimating that I understand it... Anyway, in shortened, loaded, active amplifier, receiving arrays can one simply insert a nominal number of electrical degrees of phasing line as the mathematical model calls for, or is their more to it... Hoping that Roy, AL, or Walt, or others will chime in here... denny / k8do |
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