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Wimpie wrote:
. . . There is an "however". When you make a single turn loop from flat strip that has the same width as the length of your two-turn loop, you will notice: 1. reduced AC resistance (because of the significantly larger circumference of the flat strip with respect to a thin round tube, 2. inductance will decrease (H field lines have to take a longer path around the wide strip), 3. radiation resistance will not change with respect to a single turn loop from wire/tube. This results in higher efficiency and increased bandwidth. The overall result will be better then for your two-turn loop. I think that is the reason why most programs are for single turn loops. So for the transmit case, given fixed diameter of your loop, the larger the copper surface (=length*circumference), the better the efficiency. Best thing to enhance conductor surface is to use very wide flat strip (high wind load), or multiple wires (with some spacing in between) in parallel (limited wind load). . . . Flat conductors aren't as attractive as they look at first glance. The problem is the same proximity effect mentioned earlier in the posting. Current is distributed evenly around a round conductor (assuming the perimeter is a very small fraction of a wavelength), but not along a flat strip. Because of proximity effect, the current is much more concentrated near the edges than at the middle. The result is that the resistance is considerably higher than for a wire with the same surface area. In figuring an "equivalent diameter" of a thin flat strip in order to get the same L and C properties, the rule is that a strip is equivalent to a wire whose diameter is half the strip width. This means that a strip of width w or total "circumference" 2 * w is equivalent to a wire with a circumference of pi * w / 2 ~ 1.6 w, in so far as L and C go. Since the same phenomenon affects the inductance and resistance, this would also be a good working rule for estimating the relative R of a strip or wire. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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