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#1
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I am doing some design with vertical antennas for the low bands
40/80/160M. I require a somewhat large reactance on the element to help load it on 160M, (40&80M) are working somewhat satisfactory now with the design i am using. The required reactance that i need and the size it would be using a coil (with the materials that i have right now) may not last a winter storm in VO1 land when loaded with ice or snow in 90km/h wind, so my question is, has anyone had experience using a toroid wound with the correct amount of reactance installed on the element to to achieve resonance instead of a coil and how it has been for them. |
#3
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On Mar 28, 2:10*pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: ... has anyone had experience using a *toroid wound with the correct amount of reactance installed on the element to to achieve resonance instead of a coil and how it has been for them. I've only one data point based on measurements made at a California 75m mobile shootout. K7JEB had this one mounted on a full-sized pickup. An 8.5 foot whip using a 75m Texas Bugcatcher coil at the base outperformed my antenna by +7dB. I had this one mounted on a full-sized pickup. An 11.5 foot whip using an SG-230 autotuner at the base. Not exactly the comparison you are seeking but the SG-230 did use #2 iron powder toroidal inductors. One might assume that the 6 inch long air-core bugcatcher coil contributed more radiation than the toroidal inductors. Seems to me the large air-core coil occupies a greater number of degrees of antenna than does toroidal inductor. This could be proved (or disproved) by making delay measurements on both coils using traveling wave current. Previous such measurements are worthless for such because the total current used was primarily standing- wave current and was changing phase by only ~1 deg for every ~30 degrees of antenna wire or coil. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, *http://www.w5dxp.com Thanks for your reply and the information you provided, it was very useful as well as the link, it will take me a bit to check it out LOTS of info there as well. I'm trying 40/80/160M trap vertical ,i'm experimenting with the low pass filters in the vertical as coil and cap hats as opposed to coils and coax capacitors or mica caps which ever. I would like to use the hats to distribute the current along the radiators more uniform as opposed to linear. The insulator i have on hand for the top hat is physically not long enough for the air core inductor, this is why i was wondering about the toroid at the top. 40/80M works great for dx with a 100W not bad on 15M either despite propagation lately. I should also mention its noisy on rx, i see it sometimes has 40db more noise then the loops that i used for rx, thanks again, 73 vo1bbn |
#4
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#5
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#6
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On Mar 28, 3:00*pm, wrote:
wrote: I am doing some design with vertical antennas for the low bands 40/80/160M. I require a somewhat large reactance on the element to help load it on 160M, (40&80M) are working somewhat satisfactory now with the design i am using. The required reactance that i need and the size it would be using a coil (with the materials that i have right now) *may not last a winter storm in VO1 land when loaded with ice or snow in 90km/h wind, so my question is, has anyone had experience using a *toroid wound with the correct amount of reactance installed on the element to to achieve resonance instead of a coil and how it has been for them. I have something simular and used a FT-240-61 torroid which I happened to have to build a tapped inductor with a pair of relays to switch it in/out for 80/160. The antenna analyzer and radio say it seems to work OK. Just be sure to pick a material appropriate for an inductor at those frequencies and a size appropriate for the power you intend to run. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Thanks for the information, nice to see others have done some work with this in the past.I could do the switch relay and use the same hat on 160 as i am now on 80, this overhaul length would be about 45 feet not bad on 80 but i'm think a little short for efficiency on 160, with the insulator i have on top of the 45 feet i can go another 12 feet to the 160M hat. 57 feet overhaul to see how that works out. I do have an option for an 18 feet fiberglass on that for 75 feet total but would like to stick to 57 feet max any higher than that it will be quite noticeable with the sun on the fiberglass over the tree line, i will consider though your thought maybe not worth the gain in efficiency to go the other 12 feet to the 160M hat, its maybe about 8-10 electrical degrees in vertical radiator to the 160M top hat, thanks again great info,73 vo1bbn |
#7
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On Mar 28, 3:09*pm, Roy Lewallen wrote:
wrote: I am doing some design with vertical antennas for the low bands 40/80/160M. I require a somewhat large reactance on the element to help load it on 160M, (40&80M) are working somewhat satisfactory now with the design i am using. The required reactance that i need and the size it would be using a coil (with the materials that i have right now) *may not last a winter storm in VO1 land when loaded with ice or snow in 90km/h wind, so my question is, has anyone had experience using a *toroid wound with the correct amount of reactance installed on the element to to achieve resonance instead of a coil and how it has been for them. In most applications you'd be concerned about the inductor Q, since higher Q means less loss for the same inductance. You probably won't be able to get as high Q with a toroid as you will with a good air core inductor. But Tom, W8JI pointed out that with mobile antennas on the low frequency bands, the ground loss is so much greater than loading inductor loss, the latter isn't usually an important factor. It'll be difficult to get really low ground loss with a fixed antenna, too, so a toroid should work just about as well in practice unless you have a very good ground system. You don't, though, want the Q to be outrageously low. And that can happen if water gets between the turns. (That's also true of an air wound inductor.) So I recommend putting it into a container or coating it to keep that from happening. I built a toroid-loaded quarter wavelength (half length) 40 meter dipole for Field Day, and measured the gain relative to a full size dipole. The loss due to the inductors was less than a dB. Expect a very narrow bandwidth if the loss is low. Roy Lewallen, W7EL thanks for the consideration on the topic of the Q, for the 40M vertical i have over 0220khz of 2:1 swr on 80M about 160khz, i've tried a shunt resistor to change the bw on the 80M but didn;t really do much with it before 160M was going through my mind. If I get 50-80khz bw on 160M, i can work with that to do some testing it was orginally designed for 40/80M which works ok but now i would like to try 160, thanks again for the info, 73 vo1bbn |
#8
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Cecil Moore wrote:
Seems to me the large air-core coil occupies a greater number of degrees of antenna than does the toroidal inductor. I've received a number of emails requesting that I explain what I meant by this statement. It is easiest understood by people who can solve the following problem. How can the impedance looking into the following physical 45 degree, dual-Z0 stub be purely resistive, i.e. electrically 90 degrees and resonant? ---22.5 deg 300 ohm twinlead---+---22.5 deg 50 ohm coax---open -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
#9
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On Mar 30, 4:39*pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: Seems to me the large air-core coil occupies a greater number of degrees of antenna than does the toroidal inductor. I've received a number of emails requesting that I explain what I meant by this statement. It is easiest understood by people who can solve the following problem. How can the impedance looking into the following physical 45 degree, dual-Z0 stub be purely resistive, i.e. electrically 90 degrees and resonant? ---22.5 deg 300 ohm twinlead---+---22.5 deg 50 ohm coax---open -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, *http://www.w5dxp.com Exactly as my tests have shown me. Using a coil and toroid with given same inductance say 20uH to achieve the same resonance the top part of the vertical over the toroid was about 8" longer, then the top portion of the vertical over the coil, just as you stated, More electrical degrees in the coil than the toroid. I was wondering if the self shielding properties of the toroid would have contributed to this conclusion, and because of these properties, the toroid not have any electrical degrees, so to speak, so when it come to the radiating element it would need to be slightly longer to see the electrical degrees for the wavelength or resonance frequency injected into it. thanks again for the info. |
#10
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wrote:
I was wondering if the self shielding properties of the toroid would have contributed to this conclusion, and because of these properties, the toroid not have any electrical degrees, so to speak, so when it come to the radiating element it would need to be slightly longer to see the electrical degrees for the wavelength or resonance frequency injected into it. thanks again for the info. I suspect that the VF of the toroidal loading coil is much higher than the VF of an air-core loading coil, i.e. the toroidal loading coil occupies fewer electrical degrees of the antenna. It makes sense that if the toroidal loading coil occupies fewer electrical degrees of the antenna that those degrees must be furnished somewhere else. The toroidal loading coil seems to be closer to the lumped circuit model than is the large air-core loading coil which generally requires analysis using distributed network techniques. http://www.ttr.com/TELSIKS2001-MASTER-1.pdf There are two things happening with a base loading coil. The loading coil occupies a certain number of degrees, e.g. ~36 degrees for a 75m bugcatcher coil. The stinger occupies maybe ~11 degrees for a total of ~47 degrees. The other ~43 degrees comes from the phase shift at the impedance discontinuity between the coil and the stinger. With a center loading coil, a few degrees are lost at the impedance discontinuity between the base section and the coil. That's why a larger coil is needed for a center-loaded mobile antenna. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
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