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On Apr 19, 8:09*am, Cecil Moore wrote:
Richard Fry wrote: Unless some means is provided to prevent r-f current flow on the outside of the coax and on the tower structure, they will radiate/receive r-f energy. Thus making the vertical antenna longer than 5/8WL. Using the top of the tower for a ground simply makes the tower part of the antenna system turning the entire array into an off-center-fed vertical dipole with the bottom end grounded. For instance, a 1/4WL 20m monopole mounted on top of a 60 foot tower using the tower as the coax shield ground has a take-off-angle of 57 degrees. The highest RF current is near the middle of the tower. :-( To make matters even worse: I had a similar problem with drooping 1/4WL radials DC insulated from the tower. The drooping radials coupled RF into the tower and turned it into a radiator which screwed, oops, I mean skewed the radiation pattern upwards. It took me a long time to figure out why my horizontal dipole was magnitudes better than my 1/4WL vertical on top of the 1.25WL tall tower which was grounded at the bottom and floating at the top. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, *http://www.w5dxp.com Thank you all for those points raised. I added the ground to the dish because I was getting a lot of static one night, I have not had any since but I need time to compare. The grounding line is a heavy silver coated braid connected to each section and to ground. My coax drops to ground and then goes underground for a 100 feet or so and grounded again when it resurfaces. Regards Art |
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