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#2
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Richard Clark wrote:
"How many pF capacitance in your top hat?" How many degrees in your vertical? What`s the ground system? What`s the periphery of your vertical? What`s the surge impedance of your vertical? What other loading are you using ? ON4UN works examples in the 2nd edition of "Low-Band DXing". His examples happen to have slightly more than 100 pF when there`s no loading coil. I`ve seen other top loading capacitance values of 100-500 pF. ON4UN`s capacitance hat, as used with a 40-foot vertical pipe on 160 meters which has a 166-microhenry loading coil at the top, has 43 pF. XL must equal Xc in the antenna circuit because the antenna must be resonant to maximize current and radiation. The 19th edition of the ARRL Antenna Book says on page 6-36: "For estimating the capacitance of a T antenna made of wires, an approximation is to use 6 pF per meter for vertical wires, and 5 pF per meter for horizontal wires." With parallel wires, the total capacitance must be discounted when the wires are close together. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#3
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Even if one knows the capacitance of a top-hat it's of no use unless one
also knows the value of the inductance associated with it. If the dimensions of a top-hat are tediously experimentally varied until the antenna is tuned to resonance then one still has no idea either of the capacitance or inductance. Not that the values would be of any use to anybody after the job is done. And in all likelihood the experimental procedure would not result in an optimum configuration. What is needed are the means of *predicting* top-hat capacitance even before construction materials are obtained. Optimum construction, or suitable in some sense, could then be chosen. Readers may wish to be reminded, from given dimensions program TOPHAT2 computes the performance of top-capacitance-loaded vertical antennas, not necessarily very short as for mobile operation. In the process various data of interest are produced including capacitance of the top-hat. The top-hat consists of N radial wires optionally surrounded by a wire ring. As N is increased capacitance increases until it is the same as a disk of the same diameter. Capacitance also depends to a limited extent on height above ground. For good measure the program also computes L and C values of the base matching L-network to 50 ohms. Download in a few seconds from website below self-contained program TOPHAT2 and run immediately. ---- .................................................. .......... Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.btinternet.com/~g4fgq.regp .................................................. .......... |
#4
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On Thu, 18 Mar 2004 16:46:27 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote: Even if one knows the capacitance of a top-hat it's of no use unless one also knows the value of the inductance associated with it. .... What is needed are the means of *predicting* top-hat capacitance even before construction materials are obtained. Optimum construction, or suitable in some sense, could then be chosen. This Blarney is a day long of St. Patrick's day. Been drinking green beer Reggie? :-0 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#5
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Been drinking green beer Reggie? :-0
Wrong again, Rich. Tonight I'm on South African, Olifont River Valley, "Goiya". |
#6
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