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On Sep 4, 3:37Â*am, Szczepan BiaÅ‚ek wrote:
U¿ytkownik napisa³ w ... On Sep 3, 10:29 pm, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Thu, 3 Sep 2009 19:11:42 -0700 (PDT), wrote: How in the heck are you going to get **ANY** vertical radiator to have a truly isotropic pattern? It's impossible. An isotropic pattern is a theoretical pattern in which radiation is equal in all directions. Such a pattern does not exist with real antennas. A real isotropic radiator may not exist, but one can get fairly close. If you believe the model, the total error is 0.44 db. See: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/antennas/isotropic/index.html The NEC2 deck is under the photo labeled "main". I once built one of these antennas on roughly 444MHz out of cardboard and magnet wire. The oscillator was a small crystal can oscillator running from a 9V battery to avoid having the feed coax wrecking the pattern. The impedance was nowhere near 50 ohms and required a bit of matching to get the VSWR down. I'm now digging for the photos. I used a piece of string to maintain a constant radius, a tiny pickup loop at the end of a length of coax cable running inline with the string, and eventually going to my antique HP spectrum analyzer. On the 2dB/div scale, it was a fairly good approximation of an isotropic radiator with errors mostly caused by indoor reflections and interference with the bench. Sure, you can get fairly close to isotropic with the right system, but how are you going to do it by tipping a vertical? Â*The likely results do not fit my idea of isotropic. "An isotropic radiator is a theoretical point source of waves which exhibits the same magnitude or properties when measured in all directions". The only way to make the real point source is the proper tipping. Of course it must be a monopole. S* Excellent. I am so happy that somebody out there is not following the pied pipers of denial. Thanks for your input. |
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