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On Sat, 14 Nov 2009 12:05:21 -0600, amdx wrote:
Hi All, I'm having a disagreement about the use of this folded dipole calculator impedance calculator. http://www.k7mem.150m.com/Electronic_Notebook/antennas/ folded_dipole.html We are using it to calculate the impedance of folded dipoles to drive a yagi. When entering data it asks for "Simple dipole feed impedance (ohms)" Default is 72 ohms. This assumes a 1/2 wave dipole. The fellow I'm disagreeing with say's, "the reason that the variable in the calculator for the "dipole feed impedance" could be if you want to transform the z to something else, such as 50 ohms." I don't even understand what he means. I can only think of one reason to alter the 72 ohms, that would be if you use a a different length folded dipole. I'll readily admit the other fellow knows more about this than me, but I need more convincing :-) Can anyone explain this to me. Thanks, Mike The way I read it is that you put in the feed impedance that a similar- length plain-ol' dipole in the same situation would have. In a Yagi this can be significantly lower than 72 ohms, which is the whole reason you're considering a folded dipole. Does the author have contact information? Perhaps you could ask the source? -- www.wescottdesign.com |
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folded dipole | Antenna |