Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 11, 9:18*am, Art Unwin wrote:
On Sep 11, 2:53*am, Jon Kåre Hellan wrote: writes: Roy Lewallen wrote: wrote: Of course. Everyone knows the gain of a parabola is directly proportional to the size in wavelengths, or: G=10*log k(pi*D/L)^2 Where G= gain in DB over an isotropic, k ~ .55 for most real parabolas, D is the diameter, and L is the wavelength (wavelength and diameter in the same units. So a 2,000 foot parabola on 20m would have just about 58db gain. Hm. I get 47. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Hmm, when I use 14 Mhz and 6 decimal places I get 37; must have fat fingered it the first time. Going a different way, I also get about 37. Aperture of a dish is the area, pi*r^2. r is about 14.2 wl, so area is about 635 sq. wl. Aperture of a dipole is 1/4 * 1/2 wl = 1/8 sq. wl. That makes gain 635/(1/8) = 635*8, i.e about 5100 or just over 37 dBd. This assumes 100 % illumination of the dish, which we won't achieve. So make it 35 dBd or so, i.e. 37 dBi. Using the o.p.'s formula, I get 36.5 dBi. * It's odd that pi is squared in the formula. The squared part must be to account for the area of the dish, which is pi*r^2. Obviously, this can has been compensated for by the choice of 'k'. Whoaaa guys............! *Let us think a bit more regarding the basics presented instead of parrotting dish's as used in the present state of the art. Isn't a dish built around phase change of a half wave dipole in inter magnetic coupling? If I have a flash light that is focussed does this wavelength aproach still apply? *I thought it would be a question of action and reaction. Trow a ball against the wall and it bounces back in a reflective manner to the angle of velocity. A dish as presently used changes the phase of a given signal to reverse it's direction. In physics we can also talk about mechanical force that rebound and rebound has nothing to do with wavelength! * * *If we consider radiation as being the projection of particles instead of wavelike oscillation then surely the size of the reflector is solely based on what can be collected from the *emmitter such that it rebounds to a point or a focussed form ? *I ask the question as I know nothing about the reflective phenomina of dish's tho I have visited *the one in P.R. where the dish is formed with the knoweledge that the radiation spreads out according to the emmiter used and thus when it reaches the reflector the unit strength is weaker which the dish attempts to reverse by refocussing. But then I could be totally in error thus the question to the experts Best regards Art Unwin KB9MZ .- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I think you cannot use the particle analogy with HF when dish size is not greater than wavelength. For a small dish at HF, the waves will simply bend around the dish and act as if it wasn't there. At much higher frequencies, particle concepts become more accurate. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Light,Lazers and HF | Antenna | |||
light bar for sale | Swap | |||
Announcement - The Radio-Mart Red Drap Is Now Second Rate - We Now Have Blue-Sky-Radio's Blue-Green Drap Fading . . . Into The Bright-White-Light ! {Come Into The Light !} | Shortwave | |||
DC to Light Recommendation? | Homebrew |