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On Mar 16, 12:21*am, Roy Lewallen wrote:
Hi Owen, I suppose that R.W.P. King disagrees with the "common explanation." He makes it quite clear that there is interaction of the antenna field with the stub perpendicular to the axis of the antenna wire, and that the coaxial stub does not interact in the same way and the antenna performance is therefore different. *(Antennas chapter of Transmission Lines, Antennas and Wave Guides, King, Mimno and Wing.) *This is why I like using a feedline to guarantee the phasing. *It can be done by driving collinear dipoles with equal lengths of transmission line, or by using an arrangement like the "coaxial collinear," where the radiating elements are outer conductors of coaxial transmission lines used to insure that the multiple feedpoints are at least fed in-phase voltages (and you have to consider that the currents are not exactly in phase). Cheers, Tom In most phased arrays, the objective is to get the fields from the elements to be in some particular ratio. Driving them with currents in that same ratio doesn't always accomplish the desired field ratio, though, when elements have different current distributions as they often do. (Seehttp://eznec.com/Amateur/Articles/Current_Dist.pdf.) The difference between field ratio and feedpoint current ratio is particularly great when base feeding half wave elements. As it turns out, you'll often get better field ratios by feeding with voltages having the desired magnitude ratio and phase difference than feeding with properly ratioed currents, when dealing with end fed half wave elements. The coaxial collinear requires a pretty delicate balance of outer and inner velocity factors as well as the effects of mutual coupling, particularly when there are more than a couple of elements. So I suspect that the current distribution can either help or hinder depending on how the factors are traded off. I wouldn't be surprised, though, if ratioing the voltages rather than currents is actually helpful.. As an illustration, open the EZNEC example file Cardioid.EZ. Change the number of segments to 10 per wire for better accuracy. (It can still be run with the demo program.) Click FF Plot and note the nice cardioid pattern. Then change the Z coordinates of End 2 of the two wires to 0.47 m to make them nearly anti-resonant, and click FF Plot again. The pattern deterioration is due to the elements having different current distributions. Finally, change the source types from I to V. This will force the voltages, rather than currents, at the antenna bases to be in the desired ratio. Run FF Plot again. You still won't have the nice cardioid back, but it's quite an improvement over the pattern with "correctly" ratioed base currents. The bottom line is that the element currents are more closely related to the base voltages than the base currents, when the elements are near anti-resonance (parallel, or half wave, resonance). Roy Lewallen, W7EL Thanks for the clarifications, Roy. Indeed, with my last slightly cryptic comment about considering that currents might not be in phase, I was wanting to communicate that you always want to check the currents on the elements to make sure they do what you want. That's true no matter how you feed the antenna, though as you say the feed you use may aid in insuring that the currents stay the way you want. I'm a bit surprised about your comment about the coaxial (fed) collinear requiring a "pretty delicate balance" between coax propagation velocity and (presumably) radiating element geometry. What I've found in my simulations is that I could change the coax vf, keeping the elements a transmission-line half wave long so that the feedpoints were all the same in-phase voltage, and the net gain of the antenna for a given physical length was only slightly affected. I'd typically see a couple of the elements in a ten element array with considerably lower current magnitude, but the currents were nearly in- phase on all the elements, and the pattern was always the desired "flat pancake". On the other hand, I wasn't trying for any up or down slope to the pattern, and I can see that things might change in that case. With the propagation velocities I was using, between 0.66 and about 0.9, and the element diameters I was using, I suppose the elements were always shorter than resonance, and the self and mutual impedances were not changing in any dramatic fashion. Or, perhaps my model was all screwed up! ;-) Cheers, Tom |
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