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Art, It's Saturday morning here and I'm just reading my email before my
wife and I run away from home to visit the Grandkids and go out to eat for the DAY. I am a minister and will be busy most of Sunday. I'll try to respond late Sunday or Monday morning. Deacon Dave aunwin wrote: David I think you can help me out on this efficiency malarkey. A dipole receives all signals within the dipoles range so its receive capabilities are well beyond the frequency span of choice I would venture to say that when discussing efficiency we should place bandwidth of choice received divided by the total bandwidth that the dipole actually receives and then multiply by 100. To say a dipole is 90 % efficient when some parts of a dipole supply radiation that is many times its other parts of equal lengths supply demands further explanation. Maximum radiation can only come about when the current flow is a maximum regardless of current input and is a constant per unit length and that description does not match a dipole which always require added insertion losses for equipment to overcome its inefficiences. If the dipole exceeds 90% efficiency then why waste effort and energy on interface devices between the antenna and the transformation to say.... audio? Efficiency should always be aimed at the energy needs required over the total energy that has to be supplied to meet required needs. If a truck carries a grain of desired gold buried in a ton of junk would you call the mining operation 100% efficient by ignoring search costs of finding the grain of gold and the removal costs for the junk? I believe the above verifies my initial statement that a dipole can be seen as inefficient. As an engineer I cannot agree with power in versus power out ( radiation) type statements as energy cannot be created or destroyed. Energy supplied by a lump of coal does not lose any energy in its change of state but as far as efficiency is concerned I do not count the energy that escaped in smoke as beneficial and thus quantified as a positive with respect to efficiency Regards Art "Dave Shrader" wrote in message news:_ozZb.356634$I06.3765208@attbi_s01... Guys, you're off on a tangent! I believe Efficiency is the ratio of power radiated to power input. If a dipole is 95% efficient it radiates 95 out of 100 watts. If a Yagi is 95% efficient it radiates 95 out of 100 watts. If a Quad is 95% efficient it radiates 95 out of 100 watts. If a vertical is 95% efficient it radiates 95 out of 100 watts. If a Log Periodic is 95% efficient it radiates 95 out of 100 watts. If a 1/10 wavelength antenna made of unobtainium is 95% efficient it radiates 95 out of 100 watts. Don't confuse Gain, Directivity and Efficiency in the discussion. Deacon Dave Richard Harrison wrote: Art, KB9MZ wrote: SNIP In any case, "efficient" is only as compared with similar devices. SNIP: Wrong!! See above Recall that dBd is the norm as an isotropic antenna is only a theoretical creature. Catalogs are filled with antenna characteristics as compared with a 1/2-wave dipole in free space. SNIP: The comparison is generally Gain as dBd, dBi, or dBu [unobtainium]. Not Efficiency!!! It is the standard of comparison. It could hardly be correctly called inefficient. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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