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On Jan 2, 11:08*am, mr1956 wrote:
I have posted on here before and found the member's comments very helpful so here it goes again. I am trying to stack two Yagi antennas to form a ground station to receive GPS data from an experimental rocket. The rocket portion of the system has already been tested but now I have two antennas to couple together to make up the receiving end. The particulars are as follows: I have two 11 db 900 MHz Yagis (Pacific Wireless), both of which have 50 ohm pigtails. I am trying to hook these together in a cross polarized fashion and need to insert two 75 ohm impedance matching cables so that I end up with 50 ohms at the cable end attached to the input of my receiver. Basically, there will be the two antennas, matching sections, a tee connector, then the single coax going to the receiver. I figure that 75 ohm RG-11 coax should work for this purpose and am trying to calculate the correct length of these impedance matching sections. One formula I have found online is as follows: Length (feet) = 246 * VF / Frequency (MHz) The transmitter sends RF via Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum from 910 to 918 MHz; consequently, I am using 914 MHz as a baseline. When I plug in the numbers, I get a length of about 2.1" for the length of the 75 ohm matching sections. Needless to say, it will be difficult if not impossible to do a 2.1" length of RG-11 cable with two connectors. I have considered basically fabricating a "tee" section out of two short lengths of the 75 ohm coax and RG-8 going to the receiver (soldering the whole thing together), then connecting the two Yagi antennas to that. I suppose my question is this: Is there a longer multiple of wavelength I can use for the impedance matching 75 ohm sections to develop a more practical design for what I need? Or, am I stuck with the 2.1" length due to the frequency? Thanks, Curt Newport Sir If you have the time to try, make a sphere about 4 Ft diameter of aluminum window mesh. This gives you total coverage of all polarities and you don't need a rotor as you have full sky coverage. 6 panes 2 foot wide stapled or riveted together will do the job. This is a Faraday cage where you ground the outside and connect the inside to your radio. Cost of alum window mesh is minimal and it does not take a lot of time to make.Nothing ventured nothing gained! Hula hoops inside will help to keep its shape. I assume that the idea of total sky coverage with total polarity coverage will provide you with worthwhile advantages over the route you are contemplating making it worthwile to spend a day making one. |
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