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Owen Duffy wrote:
Ok, here is the model I constructed of b) (the coaxial tubes construction). For simplicity, the upper and lower outer tubes are the same diameter, the same wire in this model. CM CE GW 10 1 0 -2 2 0 -2 2.1 0.005 GW 1 47 0 0 0 0 0 15 0.005 GE 1 GN 1 EK EX 6 1 1 1 0 TL 10 1 1 16 50 5 1e+99 1e+99 0.0001 FR 0 0 0 0 15 0 EN . . . Is my model above what you suggest? No. But I did take the time to see what would be necessary to actually model it. And what I ended up with is identical to a) except that the wire stub is replaced by the shorted transmission line model, and the lower wire has become the outside of the coaxial structure so is increased in diameter. So those are the two differences between a) and b). As Tom mentioned and I alluded to, there's some interaction between the wire stub and the antenna which doesn't exist between the ideal transmission line and the antenna, so performance is different. You might as well leave your source open circuited as to connect it to the shorted end of the transmission line stub. The current into one transmission line conductor always equals the current out of the other, so if the two are shorted, no more current can go into or out of the shorted end. Therefore, any external connection to it looks like an open circuit since no current will flow through the external connection. What's a type 6 source (EX 6)? The NEC-2 and NEC-4 documentation I have defines only types 1 - 5. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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