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#1
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![]() Experience anyone with this one ? Imagine a vertical half folded dipole. One side is grounded. Like this: o ____________________________ l ______________________________l l ground. o = input Drawn laying down but of course it stands upwards. All is a 1/4 lambda long. But now the trick: a coaxial cable can be shorted at the end too. But the lenghts needs only be 0.66 times ! So 40 metres high becomes only 26 metres. Don't bother the shielding, that is no obstacle for magnetic fields. |
#2
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On Dec 7, 5:02*am, "D. Heizinga" wrote:
Experience anyone with this one ? * Imagine a vertical half folded dipole. One side is grounded. Like this: *o *____________________________ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * l ______________________________l l ground. o = input Drawn laying down but of course it stands upwards. All is a 1/4 lambda long. But now the trick: a coaxial cable can be shorted at the end too. But the lenghts needs only be 0.66 times ! *So 40 metres high becomes only 26 metres. Don't bother the shielding, that is no obstacle for magnetic fields. Can't see much point. Makes more sense to just run a 1/4 wave to me. Sure, the coax has a slower velocity factor than wire, but that's not going to make a 26m antenna show the same performance as a wire 1/4 wave. It will still be a "short" vertical vs the monopole. I'm not sure how the current distribution would be effected. Would need to model it.. But I'm too lazy to mess with it at the moment. :/ BTW, there will be some extra loss in the mix using the coax vs plain wire if you are feeding the center conductor. Much the same as you would see using a coax dipole such as the common "bazooka". Also, there is no advantage to using a folded vertical vs a monopole if avoiding ground losses are the intent. That used to be a fairly common belief that has been pretty much shot out of the water in the last several years. So... Where's the beef? |
#3
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D. Heizinga wrote:
Experience anyone with this one ? Imagine a vertical half folded dipole. One side is grounded. Like this: o ____________________________ l ______________________________l l ground. o = input Drawn laying down but of course it stands upwards. All is a 1/4 lambda long. But now the trick: a coaxial cable can be shorted at the end too. But the lenghts needs only be 0.66 times ! So 40 metres high becomes only 26 metres. Don't bother the shielding, that is no obstacle for magnetic fields. The antenna as drawn is a common folded monopole configuration for VHF antennas. What you are proposing using coax would simply be a shorted 1/4WL stub with very little common-mode current and therefore very little radiation. Virtually all of the current would be contained on the inside of the coax and the feedpoint impedance of the shorted 1/4WL stub would be extremely high. If one could succeed in shoving some current into that sky-high impedance, the major losses would be I^2*R and dielectric with very little energy "lost" from the system as radiation - bad idea. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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