Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 4, 10:23 am, Richard Clark wrote:
On Mon, 3 Dec 2007 18:29:24 -0800 (PST), K7ITM wrote: I can make the antenna conductor be the outside of a piece of coaxial cable, and use the coaxial inside as a shorted stub which reflects a pretty good (fairly high Q) inductive reactance back to a particular point such as a quarter of the antenna length back from each end, where the stub connects across a gap in the outer conductor. Can I use such an inductive reactance to tune the antenna? Will there then be a difference in current at each end of the gap across which that reactance connects? Hi Tom, Interesting proposition. I like it. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hi Richard, Note that it's also possible to make the stub in the form of a helical resonator operated below resonance--that is, a loading coil that's shielded by the tubular conductor whose outside surface is the antenna. A problem with using plain coax is that the length is prohibitive. For example, if you make an 80-foot long dipole from RG-213-size coax, you find that you need about 550 ohms reactance at points a quarter of the total length in from the ends, to get it to resonate at 3.9MHz. But using a shorted stub of 50 ohm line requires about 85 electrical degrees of line. Even with solid polyethylene dielectric, that's 39 feet of line. Ooops. We only have 20 feet to work with. Lengthen the antenna to, say, 120 feet, and the required reactance drops to a low enough value to be practical to do with a shorted stub co-axial with the antenna wire, but at that point, why bother? You'd only have to add a few feet of wire to get the antenna to resonate without inductive loading. Mostly I find value in thinking about things like this because they make more clear what's really important: it's primarily the inductive reactance that tunes the antenna; the parasitic capacitance from a loading coil to the outside world, which is what causes it to behave like a helical delay line, is of much lower importance in determining the antenna tuning. In a long antenna that's capacitively loaded, the capacitors can have negligible parasitic series inductance and shunt capacitance to the outside world, but they still strongly affect the antenna loading. Of course, the closer to the end of the antenna you put a large loading coil, the more effect its capacitance will have. In the limit, you can dispense with the coil and just add a capacitive hat after all. Even modest size conductive balls on the ends of a thin- wire dipole will have a significant effect on the resonance. Cheers, Tom |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|