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Richard Clark wrote in
: On Sat, 02 Jan 2010 17:20:24 -0600, Lostgallifreyan wrote: I haven't a clue about intermod, yet. One thing at a time. The term Intermod is probably mis-direction if you research it. Basically, if an nearby AM/FM/TV transmitter (and nearby can be on the scale of several miles) happens to excite your antenna; then its developed voltage will overload the frontend (Intermod follows, but the products are not what I am emphasizing here). This overload can be many, many kHz, or MHz from the intended and tuned signal; and yet this frequency remote signal will develop an AGC that drives down gain on your intended signal. This characteristic is VERY common for untuned frontends in modern receivers. It is not often noted for poor antennas (those whips, when they are used for SW), but when a real antenna is attached *BINGO* sensitivity goes down the toilet. By providing a tuned input, the side-signal that would otherwise silently drive AGC is attenuated, and AGC is developed only by the in-band signals. Ok, this is cool, I understand that, and I also see that it doesn't really concern intermodulation products as the initial problem is a bigger one if it occurs. Can't help wondering why a receiver doesn't do some tuning before the AGC for exactly this reason, but never mind... Right now I see at least three contradictions (re ground rods, transformers, and feedlines) with advice from several people, one of which (the guy who wrote the description of the antenna and balanced line I mentioned) is part of a group of hams who is turned to for advice by the others. No guarantee of correctness, perhaps, but if I keep on being told I'm wrong when my stuff is coming as directly as I can get it from others with experience, then as far as I'm concerned I'll do what I think best and get out of the crossfire. A reasonable posture. Specifically, many times I've seen advice that service grounds are not adequate because of common mode noise and local currents, hence the ground rod you vehemently negate. I don't negate its use, I say that it is NOT RF ground. If you tie this ground rod to the service ground, then that wire will probably act more in your behalf than either "ground." There is a world of difference between safety grounds (what those rod-thingies are) and RF grounds (which often don't go into ground at all). Ground is a long and rich story that has been celebrated in this group for years. It deserves respect and attention well beyond these few words. True, I don't doubt that for an instant, but it's also a question of what is practical, and what is recomended by most people I've read words from at times during the last 30 years or more. While I know that CB'ers would just stick a magmount on their car's steel rooftop as often as not, and have read of other schemes that place some small horizontal plate below the antenna, there's a lot of scope between that and a rod driven into salty ocean shoreline. Most people I ever came across asserted the importance of a ground rod local to the antenna to couple with the local water table which is as close as most ever get to the ocean unless they really like getting their feet wet while they sit around at home. The proximity is as close to the point where they want to pick up RF as they're going to get, and means less noise from buildings full of electrical stuff picked up on metal between antenna and whatever other ground might be provided elsewhere. This has been the ONE common factor in pretty much everything I've seen on land-based AM reception. Anything that directly appears to negate that advice makes it hard to know what to trust, and certainly needs to be clearly explained. I can ground to service ground at near end but if the receiver is on batteries, not connected to anything except a transformer coupling RF from the antenna, then the ground only needs to be at the antenna end, according to advice I've seen in several places. To your specific arrangement - quite true. However, many who have claimed to have made every precaution then connect their receiver to an amplifier, computer, what-you-might-call-it and a new path to ground winds its way through interesting environments that are RF rich. I agree. The moment I try to connect to a system that includes a computer, mixer, multiple supply grounds, as mine does, I'll be using a local service ground and improving it the same as I would for audio, though it's currently ok for that, at least. It already uses a star grounding system where possible, as recommended by audio studio designers and others. There's actually a supply ground rod outside the front door too, which presumably helps more than the original wiring 15 years ago which didn't have that. (But note below, where I mention isolation). Even if I do ground to a water pipe or other local ground, all advice I see until now insists on having a ground rod as close to the antenna as possible, no matter what else I do, yet now you urge against this. I urge against mixing grounds. Such things arrive by the most benign and seemingly inconsequential actions. Hence the star network I mentioned, advised for audio setups.. It's kind of why I wonder about what many suggest, grounding a coax at both ends, and even in the middle if you want, and certainly to bury it. More importantly it's why the Dallas Lankford design appeals to me. Isolation baluns that transfer energy rather than use direct contact coupling look like a good way to avoid the ground problems while also avoiding local noise pickup because the twin cable will have good common mode rejection as it passes into the electrically noisy bulding. (Though I can't help wondering if Dallas Lankford also tried balanced microphone cable with a screen grounded at one end, just to see what happened) Such methods have long been used in audio; is RF below 30 MHz really so different in this case? So long as that line doesn't have dire resonances of it's own, isn't attenuation the only big risk? Dallas Lankford certainly thinks it works after working with it for at least 2 years. He says that if you do it as described it will be low noise. (As opposed to 'reducing'). I don't think he's claiming any means of reduction, just saying it's lower relative to inherently noisier systems, if wired as decribed. Based on what I know, the claim seems good. I will stop asking for advice if all I see is vigorous contradiction between people who claim knowledge I do not have. Diverting that disagreement to one with me doesn't alter this, I did not originate the info behind the choices I am considering. Even if all the various contributors come here and duke it out between them it appears I'll be none the wiser. Attention to one detail at a time helps, but a lot of this arrived through responding to the query for antenna port Z. Those adjuncts that massage input/output Z also fold in the discussion of ground. Agreed. But this is why instead of asking more questions whose answers I am probably not prepared for, I described the simplest and apparently best scheme I'd learned of so people see it whole and work from there... Convention has it that you start a new thread for each side-topic that drives you into conniptions. Ah. ![]() something directly arises from discussion in a thread, most people tend to keep it there. I already do start a new one if I'm certain the issue is different, and if I'm originating it. Asking about the facts and foibles of ground would be a good start on a new thread - especially when Art's wet-dreams descend into discussion of particle duality self annihilation driving all participation away from antenna design. For instance "Why are ground rods considered insufficient for RF application?" I am content to respond to either discussion. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Well, sure, if I am asking a direct technical or practical question. But while I'm still slightly reeling from what appears to be a dissention with what otherwise appears to be good advice, I like to keep the discussion in one place, otherwise confusion reigns and spreads to many threads. Trust me, that might annoy people. ![]() anyone who has that radio. |
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