Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() A B \ / X / \ \ / X / \ \ / X / \ \ / X / \ a b The above diagram represents a piece of material with two wires wrapped around it. One is wrapped clockwise and the other is counter clockwise. The first wire is a to A and the second is b to B. For the sake of discussion I am going to assume the piece of material is a 1" diameter pvc pipe and the wire lengths are each 16 feet or the equivalent of a 1/4 wave for 20 meters. I realize that the inductance will create a variation, but since this is hypothetical, I am assuming this is a 20 meter antenna. Also assume it is 20 feet or more above the ground with no ground plane radials. There are several scenarios for feeding this antenna. My question is what kind of performance could I expect by each of the variations below? 1) Feed ab - This is like a dipole with the elements intertwined. 2) Short AB and feed ab - a closed loop 3) feed Ab - this would require additional wire to reach the ends 4) feed Ab - using bending the pvc like a hula loop. Thank you -- 73 for now Buck, N4PGW www.lumpuckeroo.com "Small - broadband - efficient: pick any two." |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
End-feeding dipoles | Antenna | |||
Feeding Inv Vee antenna | Antenna | |||
Feeding a wire loop antenna | Antenna | |||
zip cord feeding a g5rv antenna | Antenna | |||
Enigmas wrapped in dichotomies | Policy |