| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
Here's the basic problem: Somewhere along the line you've got to match
the impedance seen at the input of the feedline to the 50 ohm resistive (50 + j0 ohm) load your transmitter needs to see. (You don't actually have to get it exact, but reasonably close.) The impedance of a half wave dipole is in this ballpark all by itself, but other antennas (and even the dipole if not resonant) usually need some kind of matching. The farther the impedance at the feedline input is from 50 + j0, the harder the job for the matching network -- voltages across and/or currents through the matching network components increase and can become downright awesome, if the impedance to be matched is far from 50 + j0. If you start shrinking a dipole to a shorter length than a half wavelength, or a monopole to shorter than a quarter wavelength, the resistance drops and the amount of reactance increases. See Fig. 7 on p. 2-5 of the Antenna Book, which shows that a quarter wave dipole has a feedpoint impedance of around 15 - j1000 ohms. Shorter dipoles have even lower resistance and larger reactance. Matching an extreme impedance involves, as I mentioned, high voltages and/or currents, which is why the MFJ caution. These high voltages and currents also result in increased loss, sometimes to the point where most of your power is going to heating the matching system components. It's entirely possible to use electrically small antennas, but there are tradeoffs involved. Here are some ways you can do it: 1. Split the matching chore between the tuner and other external components, such as a loading inductor to reduce the amount of reactance the tuner has to deal with. 2. Use transmission lines to accomplish some or all of the matching. This isn't usually the most efficient possible way (contrary to folklore) but it distributes the heat and voltage gradient. Often you can use the transmission line to transform an extreme impedance to another impedance that might also be extreme but within the range a tuner can more comfortably handle. 3. Use relatively lossy components, even possibly an intentional resistor, as part of the matching network. This reduces voltages and currents and increases bandwidth at the expense of some reduction in radiated power. 4. Reduce power if necessary to keep your tuner from self destructing. If you make an efficient matching network for an extreme impedance transformation, it will be very narrow banded, so will require frequent retuning as you QSY. Lossier systems have broader bandwidth (in general). Trading loss for bandwidth might be worthwhile depending on your circumstances. B & W has sold an antenna for decades which incorporates a resistor, and it's widely used. Browse through the QRP sites and you'll see that large numbers of QSOs are routinely had by people running a watt or less. Countless others are undoubtedly made by people with 100 watt transmitters who are radiating 10 watts without realizing it. So don't stay off the air just because you can't make an efficient antenna system. Any radiated power is better than none. If you have a decent ground system, connecting the two transmission line conductors of a short dipole together and feeding it against ground (that is, connect the shorted dipole to the "hot" side of the tuner output and the ground to the "cold" side) is a good suggestion. What you have then is a top-loaded vertical, with the radiating vertical being the feedline and the dipole being the largely nonradiating top hat. But I wouldn't consider this unless you can bury at least a few radial wires or lay them on the surface of the ground. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| FA - MFJ-941E Tuner with Ten-Tec Dummy Load | Equipment | |||
| FA - MFJ-941E Tuner with Ten-Tec Dummy Load | Swap | |||
| FA: MFJ-941E Antenna Tuner | Swap | |||
| FA: $12.00 PALOMAR PT-340 "TUNER TUNER" HELPS TUNE YOUR TUNER | Equipment | |||
| FA: $12.00 PALOMAR PT-340 "TUNER TUNER" HELPS TUNE YOUR TUNER | Equipment | |||