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Mike Kaliski wrote:
Are you sure you are not confusing the characteristic impedance of a dipole antenna with the characteristic impedence of an open feed line? One is constant, the other appears to vary along its length. A dipole antenna has low impedence at a centre feed point and high impedence at it's ends. The feedpoint impedance of a stub is NOT the same thing as the Z0 of the stub. The feedpoint impedance of an antenna is NOT the same thing as the Z0 of the antenna. The characteristic impedance of a #14 wire 30 feet above the ground is close to constant at 600 ohms. The formula for a single-wire transmission line is 138*log(4D/d). A horizontal dipole is nothing more than a single-wire transmission line which is known to be lossy. The characteristic impedance of a transmission line is constant. If the SWR 1, the voltage to current ratio varies along its length. That varying impedance (V/I) is NOT the characteristic impedance which is constant. The characteristic impedance of a horizontal dipole is ~constant. Since a dipole is a standing wave antenna, the voltage to current ratio varies along its length. That varying impedance (V/I) is NOT the characteristic impedance which is relatively constant for a horizontal wire. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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