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On Jul 5, 3:55 pm, Wimpie wrote:
On 5 jul, 18:42, Michael wrote: I've seen the Lazy H mentioned in many antenna books over the years, so I decided to try one on 10 meters. According to the ARRL handbook the Lazy H is two collinear elements stacked on above the other, Each collinear element is made up of two 1/2 wave elements. I chose to use 5/8 wave spacing between the top and bottom elements. I connected the top and bottom elements with 450 ohm 16 gauge stranded ladder line (window line). After building the antenna I verified connectivity between the top and bottom right elements and the top and bottom left elements. I color coded the end insulators on each side so I could easily see which top and bottom elements were connected to each other. The antenna book says to connect the 450 ohm ladder line from the antenna tuner to the middle of the 450 ladder line that connects top and bottom elements. Ok done. Now I put up the antenna and make sure the top and bottom elements are in phase. That is both left connected elements are on the left and both right connected element are on the right. I also make sure there is no twist in the ladder line connecting the top and bottom elements. I also checked the other ends of the 450 ohm ladder line feeding the antenna has connectivity at the antenna, and the left and right sides of the ladder line do not have connectivity. The 450 ohm ladder line feeding the antenna is about 200 feet long. Now I bring the 450 ohm feedline in to the house, hook it to my Dentron MT-2000 antenna tuner with the 4:1 balun inside, tune it up, and it sucks! Both my half wave horizontal dipole and my Solarcon Max-2000 blow it away on incoming skip even in the preferred direction of the lazy H. I rechecked my connections and the lengths of the elements and spacing and they are correct. I did take in to account the velocity factor of the 450 ladder line that connects the top elements to the bottom elements. The antenna book says the length of the 450 ladder lien between the antenna and the antenna tuner can e any lenght. The bottom element is at least 1/2 wave of the ground, and the top element is 5/8ths wave above that. What did I do wrong? Michael Hi Michael, Normally spoken the feedline between top to bottom elements is 0.5lambda long, without twist, feeding in the middle. The path from feedpoint to end of the radiation elements is 0.75 lambda, giving an almost real low input impedance (on order of 30 Ohms, depending on thickness of radiating elements). In fact you have two full wave dipoles fed in phase that give most radiation (ground ignored) perpendicular to the array (bidirectional). There is a vertical null Why choosing 5/8 lambda vertical element spacing? You create a vertical lobe and a null in the elevation radiation pattern under about 53 degrees. You also get a strong reactive input impedance, but this may not be a problem with the ladder line. Did you do some indicative field strength measurements (diode detector) to find out whether it (and the elements) do(es) radiate (comparing to the other antennas)? It may also reveal some hidden things. Maybe somebody knows a loss figure for your ladder line (at 28 MHz) to assess the losses in the line (200ft part) because of bad VSWR. Best regards, Wim PA3DJSwww.tetech.nl When you remove abc, the mail does work. Hi Wim, According to the ARRL handbook the highest gain is achieve with a 5/8ths wave spacing between the upper and lower elements. The handbook gives the following figures for estimated gain. 3/8 wave spacing = 4.4 dbd 1/2 wave spacing = 5.9 dbd 5/8 wave spacing = 6.7 dbd 3/4 wave spacing = 6.6 dbd EZNEC shows a similar gain peak with a 5/8th wave spacing between the top and bottom elements. It seems to works on 14 MHz (stacked dipoles at 14 MHz), but on 10 meters the single 10 meter dipole blows it away. |
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