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On Sep 26, 2:40*pm, "JB" wrote:
"Art Unwin" wrote in message ... On Sep 26, 11:44 am, "Mike Lucas" wrote: "Art Unwin" wrote: I do not have any lumped constants. Maxwell's laws do not include lumped loads only distributed loads and my antennas revolve solely around the laws of Maxwell which being based on equilibrium includes all four forces of the standard model Art: Of course you have lumped elements in your "antenna". You have a shoebox full of wire, fashoned into contra-wound coils. Also, the tuning device you described is a variometer, again replete with COILS. These coils constitute "lumped constants", as you call them. Mistakes like this show that your equilibrium is tilted. Mike W5CHR Memphis Tenn -If you say so -Rectifier -I am having a rethink on where to feed it aproach. Have to sleep on it -I will keep hold of that antenna but I am working on the winter one at -the moment -Regards -Art I merely used Lumped Constants as an example to describe the relationship between Inductive and Capacitive reactance, resistance, then to go on and show how it is differently applied to antennas and impedance. *Where to feed it is exactly the point in providing a transition between the feedline and antenna. *For example: *Lumped Constants in an antenna tuner not only adjust reactance by providing the conjugate reactance to whatever is presented at its input terminals, but also adjusts impedance, akin to adjusting where the current minima and maxima will be in relation to the tuner's output terminals. *There are a great many ways to physically do that, either by linear loading, lumped constants, transmission lines, transitions, transformers. *Look into the feed methods used for Yagis. Mike I am not a total newby to antennas. I understand them in my own way very well.I obviously have a problem in communication I am changing the dimensional structure purely to get the anti resonant point at the center of the top band instead of the standard resonant point which is too low to realistically to use. Now the antiresonant point will be between 100 and 200 ohms resistive which allows me to feed it directly from a 50 ohm transmission line (3/4 andrews) with negligable losses as the mismatch is resistive. Past work and experimental results lead me to belive I have a beam for top band with approx 9/10 dbi gain when a reflector is not used. Now who in the World would throw away the thought of such a antenna because of the silly aproach of old timers who consider all is known otherwise they would have changed things a long while ago? The design with all info will eventually appear on my page. Up to now I have tried to share everything but old timers on retirement close their minds and cannot abide change. If I see from past postings that a dialog could be rewarding I will respond but they are few and far between. There has not been one person on this newsgroup over the last few years who is able to look at a Gaussian field with an applied time varient field and a radiator and mathematically prove that the results are the same as Maxwell. True the units are different between Gauss and Maxwell but to deny the mathematical equivalence without doing the math is unconciousable Art Regards Art |
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