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On Jun 6, 4:58*pm, Roy Lewallen wrote:
This is why, for example, a center loading coil must have more inductance than a base loading coil to effect the same change in reactance at the base. The following is based on a fixed length antenna. The phase shift at the top of each coil is associated with the abrupt shift in characteristic impedances at the coil-stinger junction (according to W8JI). When a base section is added to a base-loaded antenna, there is an opposite abrupt shift in characteristic impedance at the base-coil junction. That bottom (negative) phase shift subtracts from the (positive) phase shift at the coil-stinger junction so more phase shift must be added through the coil to compensate for the phase shift lost at the base-coil junction. Increasing the coil length provides the necessary additional phase shift. Assume a loading coil has a characteristic impedance of 4000 ohms and the stinger has a characteristic impedance of 600 ohms at the coil- stinger junction. Given the impedance looking into the stinger, it is easy to calculate the phase shift at the coil-stinger junction. Let's (for instance) say the stinger's input impedance is 0.25 - j2500 ohms. If we normalize that impedance to the assumed Z0=600 ohms of the stinger, we get very close to -j4.167. The impedance at the very top of the coil is the same and if we normalize to the assumed Z0=4000 ohms of the coil, we get -j0.625 ohms. If we subtract the arctangent of those two values, we get the phase shift: 76.5 - 32 degrees = 44.5 degrees at the top of the loading coil. We can also read that same value from a Smith Chart. When we go to a center-loaded coil, the calculations are complicated by the resistive portion of the impedance, but we will find a negative phase shift at the bottom of the coil that subtracts from the positive phase shift at the top of the coil. Since we have reduced the total system phase shift by moving the coil to the center of the antenna, we need to add more length to the coil to increase the phase shift through the coil in order to compensate for the negative phase shift lost at the bottom of the coil. One can emulate the loading coil problem using pieces of transmission line with different Z0s. The basics of shortened dual-Z0 stubs are covered he http://www.w5dxp.com/shrtstub.htm For instance, the following shortened stub has a resonant frequency at which it is electrically 1/4WL long even though it is only 1/8WL long physically because of the 45 degree phase shift between the two sections. -----22.5 deg 300 ohm-----+-----22.5 deg 50 ohms----- What happens to the resonant frequency if we move half of the 50 ohm line to the bottom? ----11.25 deg 50 ohm---+---22.5 deg 300 ohm---+---11.25 deg 50 ohm How many degrees do we need to add to the 300 ohm line to achieve the same resonant frequency as before? Can anyone out there solve this problem? -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
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