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On 19 Nov, 22:45, Rich Grise wrote:
My current UHF antenna is a 14" Radio Shack clip lead clipped from the center of my coax to the venetian blind. I have to hand-adjust it for the channel, weather conditions, phase of the moon, etc. I can do this because I can _see_ an indication of signal strength. Well, with this new Fascist "No More Free TV" crap, I'm gonna need a real UHF antenna. My budget is exceedingly limited, but I have a supply of materials (GTAW filler rod, with some coppery-colored coating, so it solders like a dream, and is as stiff as piano wire) to build an antenna with. But I've been searching the web for some weeks now, and I can't seem to find any kind of formula, except there was this program I downloaded - LPDA.EXE, which runs on DOS. Unfortunately, it's in Russian or Polish or Uzbekistani - one of those East Yurp languages. Here's a screen snap:http://mysite.verizon.net/richgrise/...rog-Output.gif Which I went through pretty much by-guess-and-by-gosh - can anybody read that stuff? There are a lot of factors I don't know about, like "Tau", and all of the specific designs on the web are flat - something is telling me I want one of those pyramid-shaped ones, but I really don't know the difference (between that and flat) - it's probably something to do with bandwidth or F/B ratio or whatever. My local library has no ARRL Antenna Book (!), and did I mention I have a seriously limited budget? So, how do I pursue this? It'd be nice to have a program that will calculate the whole thing for me, but am I dreaming? If I want to send myself to Log-Periodic School, where should I start? Or, does anyone have a UHF-TV log-periodic design that they'd share? :-) Thanks, Rich I have used the procedure in the following paper: http://www.urel.feec.vutbr.cz/ra2008...tracts/116.pdf I slightly modified the design (e.g. I used several different diameters for the elements), but basically I used the same formulae. I did not use their formula for deciding the right spacing between the support tubes to get the right characteristic impedance, because I suspect that maybe it is only valid over a limited range of spacing. Instead, I measured the characteristic impedance of just the tubes with no elements attached on a VNA that could plot impedance vs distance in a sort of TDR mode, and I adjusted the spacing until it was right. I epoxied some very small (roughly 1mm cube) spacers between the support tubes to keep the distance right, once it was adjusted properly. It is important that the space between the support tubes is mostly filled with air, not epoxy or any other dielectric, because the wave needs to propagate at the right speed between the tubes so that the elements are fed in the right relative phase, and this won't happen if there is something with a higher dielectric constant in there. I used those brass tubes that you can get in hobby shops, but unfortunately brass is fairly resistive and I did not silver plate it. I would have used aluminium if it were easier to solder in a reliable way. The finished antenna had a good return loss over the desired frequency range (sorry, can't remember the numbers) and it did the job for which it was intended although I don't have a measured gain value etc. because I don't have an antenna range. I have a spreadsheet for calculating the element lengths (in Openoffice.org format) if you are interested. Chris |
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