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"Rick" wrote in
: .... Tracking the source on 80m seems impossible. I made a 2 ft square loop antenna, which has some directivity but the noise level using it seems to not change much as I travel the highway. If you study the pattern of a small loop antenna, it has a pair of deep nulls. These are the most useful for locating the direction of the source. The nulls will not be as deep, and not ideally located if the feedline is also part of the antenna, ie if the loop is not well balanced. So much so that common mode current effects may render the antenna fairly useless from a directivity point of view. You did not mention the measures you took to assure loop balance / insignificant common mode current. Realise also that you may be trying to locate the cause of the emission, but the loop (properly constructed and used) leads you to the radiation source, and the power lines are very large and very effective antennas. Nevertheless, it should be relatively easy to locate the cause of the emission. From a practical point of view, I have used a small loop and portable receiver for locating and measuring emissions from BPL over HF, and noise due to fautly transformer bushings, cracked insulators etc. Worked a treat for me. One loop is described at http://www.vk1od.net/antenna/SmallUn...Loop/index.htm . Owen |
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