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Dual-Z0 Stubs
Richard Clark wrote:
If Cecil every gets over this intellectual pebble in the path, please quote it so that I can see how much strain that ascent took. What you don't seem to realize is that the loaded antenna can be assumed to be lossless in free space with a 4-wire radial ground plane and the E-fields and H-fields are within 10% of their real-world values, i.e. you are complaining about relatively small secondary effects. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
Cecil Moore wrote:
What you don't seem to realize is that the loaded antenna can be assumed to be lossless in free space with a 4-wire radial ground plane and the E-fields and H-fields are within 10% of their real-world values, i.e. you are complaining about relatively small secondary effects. As far as conditions on the antenna are concerned, you are complaining about relatively small secondary effects. Of course, there are large effects on radiation and ground loss, but those items are not the subject of this discussion. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
Hi Richard,
I wont even attempt to answer the "intimidating" questions - they're far too tough for me! But just a couple of comments: 1) The change in coil size when I swapped from a base-loaded to a mid- loaded model was nothing more than a convenience to reduce the total number of segments and reduce the computation time. It was not borne out of any electrical considerations, so please don't read anything more than that into it. In retrospect it was a silly thing to do because it has probably introduced a "red herring". 2) You suggest that the Corum method has little utility. However, the inductance calculator based on the method appears to give usefully accurate predictions of "equivalent lumped reactance" and SRF (jury still out on that one). If that calculator was not available, it seems to me that designing a coil for something like a mobile whip loading application would require tedious iterations of the helix generator in EZNEC. 73, Steve G3TXQ On May 11, 9:19*pm, Richard Clark wrote: Hi Steve, I don't often drop into this side-thread as the topic had drifted into a stagnated intellectual backwater. On this and one prior posting by you: On Sat, 9 May 2009 13:56:31 -0700 (PDT), wrote: OK, I tried what you suggested. I put my loading coil midway up a 20ft vertical wire in the EZNEC model. I reduced the number of turns to lift the resonant frequency to 5.6MHz. I note how little Corrum really has to offer when you had to take the same:effective electrical length of the coil (38.83 degrees) and change it (to the same effective electrical length? *I think not.) to fit the same available wire, at the same specific frequency - only at a different height along the available wire. By my quick read on the stale crisis of current "fall-off" and proving Corum by EZNEC; it seems quite apparent that EZNEC (the authority) is driving the coil requirements which are then force fitted by Corum's inappropriate application. After all, Corum says nothing of: 1. *Application; 2. *Base loading; 3. *Mid or Top loading; 4. *Stinger selection; and yet all solutions seem to derive from their math with the elegance of an ad-hoc "missing degrees" provision (that is quickly discarded as shown above when current becomes the focus). Corum DOES say that the formula is only applicable for certain constraints which I note are NEVER observed in the application nor the breach. *All of the commentary proceeds through equation (32) when every argument is an instance of equation (31). How much are you willing to accept of that paper (which is another way of asking how much you are willing to discard)? I will ask one ace-buster question that I expect no one will answer: * * * * Show me the computation for M (= tau · a) which would be appropriate for the NON-quarterwave resonance of the coil in question at 3.85 MHz. For extra credit: 1. *What is the wave number, k for 3.85 MHz? 2. *What is the phase velocity for the original (not changed) coil? 3. *What is tau for the original (not changed) coil at 3.85 MHz? Yes, this is intimidating to ask; but seeing there are so many authorities on Corum; and that these considerations would have been done by the authors themselves; then their solutions must reside somewhere in notes or as marginalia for quick reporting (or could be summoned up through running through the same math as before). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
Tom,
One further puzzling featu When I look at the EZNEC currents in the bottom 10ft of my 20ft mid- loaded model there is *NO* current reduction from bottom to top: 1A at the bottom and 0.99996A at the junction with the coil. So no evidence of a cosine shape starting at the bottom. Brain hurts - time for bed! 73, Steve G3TXQ |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
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Dual-Z0 Stubs
On May 11, 2:09*pm, wrote:
Hi Richard, I wont even attempt to answer the "intimidating" questions - they're far too tough for me! But just a couple of comments: 1) The change in coil size when I swapped from a base-loaded to a mid- loaded model was nothing more than a convenience to reduce the total number of segments and reduce the computation time. It was not borne out of any electrical considerations, so please don't read anything more than that into it. In retrospect it was a silly thing to do because it has probably introduced a "red herring". 2) You suggest that the Corum method has little utility. However, the inductance calculator based on the method appears to give usefully accurate predictions of "equivalent lumped reactance" and SRF (jury still out on that one). If that calculator was not available, it seems to me that designing a coil for something like a mobile whip loading application would require tedious iterations of the helix generator in EZNEC. 73, Steve G3TXQ For what it's worth, I've been using a coil program for quite a few years now that is able to calculate the performance of a coil based on a helical transmission line model. It was developed out of travelling wave tube theory. It turns out I discovered a bug in the program and reported it to the author, who very kindly corrected it. I've come to trust it to come up with answers that are very useful in an engineering sense. I would not expect it to tell me inductance or other parameters (e.g., first parallel self resonance and first series self resonance) accurately enough to be used as a precision lab standard, but that's not what I use the program for. When I became aware of the HamWaves web page, I was curious about how well its answers compared with the ones I'd become used to trusting. They do differ a little, but again, for what I do with them, I trust them both. Either one will provide results I can use to wind a coil for a filter and know I won't have to much to adjust the coil to being "right on." And in fact, I also found a very small bug (or at least an anomaly or inconsistency) in the HamWaves calculation, and reported that to Serge, who likewise very graciously acknowledged it and who I believe corrected it. So I'd strongly support your thought that the HamWaves calculator provides useful results. Understand that they won't be perfect, but also understand that you may have trouble making measurements accurate enough to know how much they are in error. But for almost everything I do with coils, what I care about is whether the filter or tank circuit or antenna in which the coil is used actually works like I want. My trust in these programs comes from being able to build a lot of filters over the years that all work like I designed them to work, with very little effort to tweak the coils I built per the programs' predictions. I'll adjust my expectations if I ever find cases where the programs lead me astray. Cheers, Tom |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
K7ITM wrote:
So I'd strongly support your thought that the HamWaves calculator provides useful results. So who are we to believe? W8JI's 3 nS delay measurements through a large 75m loading coil, or the HamWaves 21.5 nS prediction? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
Richard Clark wrote:
When that happens, all that is required is that you suspend your doubt that if that coil at the base of a fixed height antenna were moved, it would fulfill resonating that fixed height antenna with the same number of Corum "electrical degrees" in migration. Using standard stub theory and transmission lines, I have shown how moving parts of dual-Z0 stubs from one place to another requires a change in the length of parts of the stub. Why do you have such difficulty applying this standard transmission line theory to loading coils? Could it be that you are dismissing technical facts because you are incapable of understanding them? If so, you have lots of company down through history. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
Dual-Z0 Stubs
Richard Clark wrote:
Hi Tom, Thanx for the flowers. In point of fact, inductor and capacitor standards are shielded. They are three terminal devices. To remove the effects of the shield you drive it at the same potential (which is to say the shield is floating with respect to everything/one around it). For the practicality of things, Reggie was never very far off the mark and you following him as an exemplar is suitable to other's inventions of proximities that have no defining moment in their references. I can well guess the remainder of your method as it was well defined in most Ham manuals (derived from conventional EE methods) when I read up on it 40 odd years ago. If Cecil every gets over this intellectual pebble in the path, please quote it so that I can see how much strain that ascent took. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hi Richard, In point of fact, I just used a dip-meter-frequency-counter combination to see if I could get somewhere near the results that ON4AA's calculator suggested. Later, I cut the coil at its center point, attached a cheap antenna analyzer there and looked for a frequency of least impedance. The dip meter indicated about 8.93 Mhz and the analyzer indicated 8.98 Mhz. I consider the closeness of the two readings to be pure accident. However, they do reinforce each other in leading me to believe that the Corum calculator has some serious deficiencies. Serious enough, that those who claim its correctness should do some practical investigation into its merits in order to spare themselves the jibes of their more analytical brethren. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
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