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J.B. Wood wrote:
The problem here is an impedance analyzer can't distinguish between resistive losses (antenna, ground, tuner (if considered part of the antenna)) and the radiation resistance of the antenna. To determine efficiency you'd have to make some field strength measurements (usually performed with a calibrated field strength meter) in order to determine how much of the power going into the antenna terminals is being radiated into free space. The only "approximation" would be to measure the resistive part of the antenna feedpoint impedance and then subtract from this the radiation resistance obtained from calculation. Sincerely, and 73s from N4GGO, A good deal of, if not the majority of, the loss in a short antenna system is in the matching system components. So even if this method allowed you to get a reasonable estimate of the efficiency of the antenna itself(*), you still wouldn't know what fraction of the transmitter power is getting radiated, since you can't tell how much is lost in the tuner. (*)My limited experience in doing careful antenna measurements leads me to be very skeptical of the ability to determine antenna efficiency even very roughly by a single impedance measurement. I think comparison of measured bandwidth to lossy model results is probably the best indicator. The bottom line is that the impedance meter won't tell you much about the efficiency of the antenna or system. About the only practical way available to most amateurs is comparison of received signal strengths between the antenna and a known reference antenna, using a step attenuator to measure the difference. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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