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#1
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I have an efficiency question concerning feed lines. My present
system is RG-8X to my 75 meter inverted vee which is about 85 feet away from the shack. I propose to replace some 88 feet of coax with 300 ohm window ladder line that is inserted into the coax run with 4:1 baluns to match the coax on each end. Also at the feed point of the antenna switch from a voltage balun to a current balun (ferrite chock type). By my calculations with a 98 watt generator I will increase the power to the load by about 11-20 watts and with a 985 watt generator, 117-210 more watts will reach the load. Figuring theoretical total system (A) against total System (B) or by just the difference in the 88 feet of ladder line versus coax. What do you think the increase will be? |
#2
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... in practical terms... not worth the trouble.
![]() - 'Doc |
#3
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Sonny Hood wrote:
I have an efficiency question concerning feed lines. My present system is RG-8X to my 75 meter inverted vee which is about 85 feet away from the shack. I propose to replace some 88 feet of coax with 300 ohm window ladder line that is inserted into the coax run with 4:1 baluns to match the coax on each end. Also at the feed point of the antenna switch from a voltage balun to a current balun (ferrite chock type). By my calculations with a 98 watt generator I will increase the power to the load by about 11-20 watts and with a 985 watt generator, 117-210 more watts will reach the load. Figuring theoretical total system (A) against total System (B) or by just the difference in the 88 feet of ladder line versus coax. What do you think the increase will be? ================================================== == Why not replace the complete coax feeder with twin lead feeder (if you can keep it away from soil and/or metal) , and use a matching box directly accepting the twin lead feeder ( without ferrite type balun), be it 300 or 450 Ohms or approx 600 Ohms ladder line ? It will improve efficiency and above all make the antenna multi-band. Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH |
#4
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On May 28, 10:16*am, Sonny Hood wrote:
* *I have an efficiency question concerning feed lines. *My present system is RG-8X to my 75 meter inverted vee which is about 85 feet away from the shack. *I propose to replace some 88 feet of coax with 300 ohm window ladder line that is inserted into the coax run with 4:1 baluns to match the coax on each end. *Also at the feed point of the antenna switch from a voltage balun to a current balun (ferrite chock type). *By my calculations with a 98 watt generator I will increase the power to the load by about 11-20 watts and with a 985 watt generator, 117-210 more watts will reach the load. *Figuring theoretical total system (A) against total System (B) or by just the difference in the 88 feet of ladder line versus coax. *What do you think the increase will be? I think you left out the losses in the balun. With a kilowatt even a large (by ham standards) balun will get very warm if you leave the key down... my guess is it's not quite as much as you're saving but comparable. It all amounts to 10%, and that's such a tiny fraction of a S-unit. Now, if your antenna were an incredible mismatch to coax to begin with, then ladder line makes good sense. Say you want to use your same inv-V on 40M, then you'd run ladder line all the way to your tuner and be in fat city. Tim N3QE |
#5
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Sonny Hood wrote in
: I have an efficiency question concerning feed lines. My present system is RG-8X to my 75 meter inverted vee which is about 85 feet away from the shack. I propose to replace some 88 feet of coax with 300 ohm window ladder line that is inserted into the coax run with 4:1 baluns to match the coax on each end. Also at the feed point of the antenna switch from a voltage balun to a current balun (ferrite chock type). By my calculations with a 98 watt generator I will increase the power to the load by about 11-20 watts and with a 985 watt generator, 117-210 more watts will reach the load. Figuring theoretical total system (A) against total System (B) or by just the difference in the 88 feet of ladder line versus coax. What do you think the increase will be? One of the numbers that is hard to come up with is the loss through a balun. The only number I could find for a voltage balun is a matched loss of 0.075db, this would be times 2 in your setup. So there is loss, and it's well known that the loss goes up with miss match. I think you are neglecting the loss through the baluns and the miss match loss. Remember your antenna will not be 50 ohms over a very wide frequency range. Going open wire line all the way or changing to RG8 size coax will likely work just as well and be simpler to do. John W3JXP |
#6
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Tim Shoppa wrote:
Hi, I think you left out the losses in the balun. With a kilowatt even a large (by ham standards) balun will get very warm if you leave the key down... my guess is it's not quite as much as you're saving but comparable. It all amounts to 10%, and that's such a tiny fraction of a S-unit. The other side probably wouldn`notice the difference. Now, if your antenna were an incredible mismatch to coax to begin with, then ladder line makes good sense. Say you want to use your same inv-V on 40M, then you'd run ladder line all the way to your tuner and be in fat city. I would not take TV ladderline if you have a high standing wave ratio, and this will happen if you use the dipol for multiband purpose. I`ve tested a dipol with about 20 m length (67 ft) for 80m. At first I got almost the same s-meter report compared with a W3DZZ trap dipol. But after a couple of month I noticed that the received signal was up to 20 db down compared with the trap dipol. I only used 100 watts but it broke the TV ladder line. Here I`ve learned what has happened: http://www.w8ji.com/vswr_reactive_power.htm I`m planning to build a new antenna with self built ladderline for multiband purposes for one of the traps of my W3DZZ is broken. I´ve only bought the spacers for the new ladder line. -- 73 DJ4PB |
#7
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Highland Ham wrote:
Why not replace the complete coax feeder with twin lead feeder (if you can keep it away from soil and/or metal) , and use a matching box directly accepting the twin lead feeder ( without ferrite type balun), be it 300 or 450 Ohms or approx 600 Ohms ladder line ? It will improve efficiency and above all make the antenna multi-band. Let's see how much improvement. Assuming a 50 ohm antenna, 3.8 MHz, and using Owen's xmission line calculator at: http://www.vk1od.net/tl/tllc.php 85 feet of RG8x has a loss of 0.478 dB. 85 feet of 300 ohm twinlead has a loss of 0.424 dB. How much will that 0.054 dB improve efficiency? 1%? The coax has a 1:1 SWR. The 300 ohm twinlead has a 6:1 SWR. That makes the losses almost equal. If we were talking about RG-213, the losses would be 0.308 dB, 0.116 dB better than the 300 ohm twinlead. The following is becoming a myth: "One can ignore the losses in twinlead and ladder-line." Also - maybe he doesn't want to use a "matching box". -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#8
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On May 28, 1:22*pm, (Dieter Kiel) wrote:
wrote: Hi, I think you left out the losses in the balun. With a kilowatt even a large (by ham standards) balun will get very warm if you leave the key down... my guess is it's not quite as much as you're saving but comparable. It all amounts to 10%, and that's such a tiny fraction of a S-unit. The other side probably wouldn`notice the difference. Now, if your antenna were an incredible mismatch to coax to begin with, then ladder line makes good sense. Say you want to use your same inv-V on 40M, then you'd run ladder line all the way to your tuner and be in fat city. I would not take TV ladderline if you have a high standing wave ratio, and this will happen if you use the dipol for multiband purpose. I`ve tested a dipol with about 20 m length (67 ft) for 80m. At first I got almost the same s-meter report compared with a W3DZZ trap dipol. But after a couple of month I noticed that the received signal was up to 20 db down compared with the trap dipol. I only used 100 watts but it broke the TV ladder line. Here I`ve learned what has happened: http://www.w8ji.com/vswr_reactive_power.htm I`m planning to build a new antenna with self built ladderline for multiband purposes for one of the traps of my W3DZZ is broken. I´ve only bought the spacers for the new ladder line. I have a 135-foot dipole fed with approx 100 feet of home-made ladder line and am incredibly happy with its performance from 80M all the way to 15M. Much of the joy of the ladderline was not in buying the parts to make it, but making it from stuff on hand. I had a sheet of 1/8" polycarbonate that I cut into 4"x3/8" strips, then drilled and notched, to put a spacer every foot using tie-wires. Others boil wooden dowels in paraffin for the spacers (the method recommended by the 1930's ARRL Handbook). Seeing the ladderline go up 85 feet to the middle of the dipole is a pure joy! Tim N3QE |
#9
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11 - 20 watts represents only 0.5 - 1 dB, which would virtually never be
discernible by the other station. As others have noted, even this insignificant potential gain would be reduced by balun loss. But what no one else has mentioned is that the ladder line loss can increase significantly, possibly even dramatically, when it gets wet. Any improvement you'll see from the proposed change will be due entirely to placebo effect. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#10
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Tim Shoppa wrote:
I have a 135-foot dipole fed with approx 100 feet of home-made ladder line and am incredibly happy with its performance from 80M all the way to 15M. Why those are good choices for lengths can be seen on the following diagram: http://www.w5dxp.com/pnts130.gif You are relatively close to a low-impedance/current- maximum point on all HF bands. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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