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On May 1, 8:10*am, Wimpie wrote:
On 1 mayo, 02:25, "VK2KC" wrote: I was wondering if anyone had any experience of the Meandering Antenna or Meandering Dipole, I have found an article in Pat Hawkers book but the drawings are a bit hard to understand. I have limited space and was considering building one for 7.1 mhz Thanks John Hello, I assume that you talk about meandering like the zig/zag pattern on a viper or the pattern of a sidewinder. At other frequencies, yes I do have. Meandering increases the inductance per unit of length, so the propagating wave slows down. This results in a reduction of resonant length. The zig/zag wire pieces do, however, not contribute to the far field ?????? This is news to me! Can you give me a reference ? This clearly suggests that a twin wire formed in a closed circuit helix cannot radiate in the far field when it clearly can regardless of slow wave. If the dipole is clearly in equilibrium it cannot fail to radiate but then everything depends on the presented aparture and what medium it is operating under, such as a submarine at some depth in sea water versus fresh water. I have found that such arrangements start out at over 100 ohms and then gradually dampen down to 50 ohms when you start to exceed twice the full wave length and it comprises of a fully connected electrical wire circuit A fine example of a meander circuit would be a fractal arranged in full circuit form Regards Art radiation. Given the same feed current, the meandered dipole radiates less then the full HW one, so the radiation resistance goes down. When your dipole length is about half of the full size length, feed point impedance goes down with almost factor 4. When you experience good VSWR in a center fed short meandered dipole, you can be sure to have losses. Best regards, Wim PA3DJSwww.tetech.nl remove abc first in case of PM |
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