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On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 01:36:22 GMT, "Lee"
wrote: I don`t want a fixed dipole at low height!! i want a rotary dipole on the top of my tower (mast)....i am aware i can fit a 33foot fixed, wire dipole into a 35foot garden, lengthwise, but the length of my garden runs east/west so the dipole would fire north/south - not good...... the magloops receive very well, with lower noise than a regular antenna, i can hear stations i wouldn`t normally hear on a regular antenna, plus, a horizontal dipole, generally, has more gain than a horizontal omni magloop at the same height but is a noisier r/x than the magloop, which makes the dipole better for t/x mode....Yes?... Hi Len, Yes, but marginally. This is a double edged sword. The Q that gives you such superlative receive characteristics is going to drive you into CW mode in, perhaps, 80M, and certainly in 160M - not to speak of the critical tuning. You have the height, something I missed from the distraction of 20 other unrelated postings to this thread, so you have solutions and that height is both far and away sufficient for the upper HF, and more to the matter, the best practical solution for your neighborhood. As to the antenna construction, you have answered the Ohmic losses to a considerable extent, and you are aware of the relationship of Ohmic Loss to Radiation Resistance. You would do well to report to the group your SWR bandwidth for several of these bands so we can get a grasp of the actual Q. Simply for 160/80/40/20, how many KHz between the 2:1 points? There are a lot of pluses there, except for the high Q on low bands. You also express in your list of negatives that you don't seem to get out (a transmit problem). My garden is 14ft wide and a 14meg dipole is 33ft+, i don`t want my neighbours complaining when half the antenna is over their garden when i`m working east west...hence linear loading the dipole...to shorten it!! If I recall (as you have a lot of widely separate issues here), you want to operate 20M. Your garden as you state here is too narrow (it is) for the direction you desire. An efficient design is going to demand end loading aka top hat style (long radial spokes at the end of each arm of the dipole you want).The end loads, if sufficiently developed (and not a simple installation, I suspect) could do it without further loading with a coil somewhere (and if it were anywhere, the good advice from years of reporting here would indicate that it would be one half to two thirds out and away from the feed point, on both sides). Another alternative is an inverted V which would seem to be within your capacity (depends on where the tower is sited). As your interests span 20 down to 80 and Q intrudes into the bandwidth you desire at the longer wavelengths, then lowering Q would only drive down your efficiency and increase your complaint of getting out. It seems you are rapidly moving away from the loops. You might (if you can interpret the technical comments) try Arthur's contra-wound inventions. No doubt, they too would make good receive antennas, and the proximity of windings would lower Q, but this would come at a severe loss of gain and sensitivity. A receiver has enough gain to make up for this loss, but your transmitter is forever crippled with the introduction of both Ohmic loss and its loss boost due to tightly coupled currents. A larger diameter antenna is called for if you are sticking with loops, but that is probably unmanageable. Another breed of loop, the halfwave open loop allows you to build an omni horizontal polarized antenna in a small area, but we now enter into other issues you have not discussed. What resources, other than the tower, are available to you for supporting the linear loaded dipole you seek? If you have four support points, your garden size is not unsuited to a full half wave design, there are no Q issues, no efficiency issues - except for matching to a 5 Ohm load. What can I say? Compromise antennas demand care and feeding. All i requested was a suitable design configuration for a linear loaded halfsize rotary dipole to go on top of the tower and my reasons why....... not a discussion on magloops .... I`ll go with the linear short 1/4 wave vertical layout for each leg of the dipole, where half the element is fed back on itself down to 6 inches from the ground ( or, in my case, to the mast ) with about 3 inch spacing of the element. You lost me entirely here. You want a horizontal dipole, and you will build a closely coupled vertical system that will rotate where half the element is within 6 inches of ground? Too much is left unsaid in this description. Is your tower guyed? Freestanding? You are using the mast (tower?) as half the antenna? Is the mast (tower?) grounded? This sounds like you are top feeding a vertical quarterwave open transmission line that rotates around one element. If so, your feed line is going to really become a nightmare of isolation. It will show varying horizontal/vertical directivity to a loss of 10dB in any direction - if you can match to the near short circuit conditions at the feed point. I don't think this is what you mean, but what you describe is vague. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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