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K7ITM wrote:
Steve, this is fine for a base loading coil, but I'd suggest you try your experiment with a loading coil well up the antenna, where the coil is significantly larger diameter than the straight conductor in which it's placed. The same size coil you described (though presumably a different number of turns), placed at least half way up something like a 15 or 20 foot long thin wire, should illustrate the point. Is the EZNEC model then in such good agreement with placing a reactive load at that point in the antenna, where the reactance is from ON4AA's online calculator? The key to understanding this question and its logical answer lies in the phase shift that occurs at impedance discontinuities. For a base-loading coil, there is only one impedance discontinuity in the system, a hi-Z0 coil to a low-Z0 stinger. That single discontinuity provides a positive phase shift at the '+' junction of the coil and stinger. coil stinger FP//////////+------------------- When a straight shaft section is installed under the coil, it introduces one additional impedance discontinuity at 'x' in addition to the '+' top of coil to stinger discontinuity. base coil stinger FP-------x////////////+--------- Because the impedance discontinuity between the base section is a low-Z0 to hi-Z0 transition, the phase shift is negative, i.e. the antenna *loses electrical degrees* at that junction. Therefore, more turns must be added to the inductor to supply the number of negative degrees lost at the base section to coil impedance discontinuity. This might best be illustrated with pieces of transmission line. Please reference my web page at: http://www.w5dxp.com/shrtstub.htm The following concepts apply to the above antennas but may be easier to understand using transmission lines. Here is a dual-Z0 stub that is physically 44.4 degrees long but is 90 degrees (1/4WL) long electrically, i.e. it is functionally a 1/4WL open-circuit stub. ---22.2 deg 300 ohm line---+---22.2 deg 50 ohm line--- The Z0=300 ohm to Z0=50 ohm transition provides for +45.6 degrees of phase shift. This is akin to the base- loaded antenna above. Here is a dual-Z0 stub with 11.1 degrees (half) of the 50 ohm line moved to the left. (The words are abbreviated because of space on the line.) --11.1 deg 50--+--22.2 deg 300--+--11.1 deg 50-- Who can tell me how long electrically is this stub using the identical feedlines from the above example? This reconfigured stub with half of the 50 ohm feedline moved to the bottom is now electrically only ~80.6 degrees long. What has happened? The new impedance discontinuity from the base section at the bottom of the coil has cost us electrical degrees by providing a *negative phase shift*. How do we solve the problem? Add some length (degrees) to the Z0=300 ohm section. If we make the 300 ohm section 38.5 degrees long, the stub will be electrically 90 degrees long once again. This is conceptually the same problem we encounter when we move the loading coil from the base location to the center location. When we move the coil up the shaft, we introduce a negative phase shift at the bottom of the coil. Therefore, we must increase the number of turns to make the loading coil electrically longer. Incidentally, w8ji knows about the coil to stinger positive phase shift and describes it on his web page. He apparently doesn't know about the opposite negative phase shift at the bottom of the coil where the shaft attaches. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
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