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[email protected] October 7th 10 07:00 PM

Antenna materials
 
Szczepan Bialek wrote:

In each radiator is a stream of electrons. The oscillating pump is in the
transmitter. But where is the tank with the electrons?


Where is the source of drugs that make you post this babbling nonsense?


--
Jim Pennino

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John Smith October 7th 10 07:31 PM

Antenna materials
 
On 10/7/2010 10:35 AM, Szczepan Bialek wrote:

...
In each radiator is a stream of electrons. The oscillating pump is in the
transmitter. But where is the tank with the electrons?
...


Now, that is just plain silly! How are you going to Bismuth plate an
oscillating electron pump? straight face

Regards,
JS

John Smith October 7th 10 07:36 PM

Antenna materials
 
On 10/7/2010 9:41 AM, Man-wai Chang wrote:

...
You meant I could use the aluminum window frames as a big antenna? :)
...


Absolutely! But, don't you find the aluminum round tubing more suitable?

Regards,
JS

K1TTT October 7th 10 10:51 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Oct 7, 4:41*pm, Man-wai Chang wrote:
Since the conductivity of aluminum is about 43 times higher than that of
bisimuth, I think you are babbling.


You meant I could use the aluminum window frames as a big antenna? :)

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YES! i have done that and it works great... even better than
bedsprings because you can make it vertically polarized by feeding in
the right place.

Man-wai Chang October 8th 10 05:07 AM

Antenna materials
 
You meant I could use the aluminum window frames as a big antenna? :)
Absolutely!


For both AM & FM?

But, don't you find the aluminum round tubing more suitable?


But the window frame is right here! :)

--
@~@ Might, Courage, Vision, SINCERITY.
/ v \ Simplicity is Beauty! May the Force and Farce be with you!
/( _ )\ (x86_64 Ubuntu 9.10) Linux 2.6.35.7
^ ^ 12:03:01 up 8 days 13:20 1 user load average: 0.00 0.01 0.00
不借貸! 不詐騙! 不援交! 不打交! 不打劫! 不自殺! 請考慮綜援 (CSSA):
http://www.swd.gov.hk/tc/index/site_...sub_addressesa

Szczepan Bialek October 8th 10 08:14 AM

Antenna materials
 

Uzytkownik "John Smith" napisal w wiadomosci
...
On 10/7/2010 10:35 AM, Szczepan Bialek wrote:

...
In each radiator is a stream of electrons. The oscillating pump is in the
transmitter. But where is the tank with the electrons?
...


Now, that is just plain silly! How are you going to Bismuth plate an
oscillating electron pump? straight face


Art wrote: "What do you think?"

So I wrote that antennas are made of metalic conductors, salt waters and
live tree. It seem that material is not important.
The key factor is the oscillating, nonsymetrical flow of electrons. We need
the tank, the pump and an antenna. May be with or without Bismuth plate.
S*



K1TTT October 8th 10 11:46 AM

Antenna materials
 
On Oct 5, 2:31*am, Art Unwin wrote:
Antennas usually are made of aluminum as copper is somewhat heavier
and silver and gold is to expensive. Since lead is now banned in a lot
of places especially with solder you can now buy solder that is doped
with Bismuth !
Now you can't coat your elements with it but *if you have a solder
bath you can run copper wire thru it. The bismuth is brittle
but with the underlying copper it is stiff enough to stick it on the
antenna elements. I am assuming that the applied current would travel
along the bismuth coating instead of the aluminum and therefore should
increase gain for antennas that use coupling methods such as the Yagi
tho bandwidth may well suffer some what.
What do you think?


testing, 1, 2, 3... can you hear me now??

Cecil Moore October 8th 10 01:10 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Oct 8, 2:14*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
The key factor is the oscillating, nonsymetrical flow of electrons.


"... for a copper wire of radius 1 mm carrying a steady current of 10
amps, the drift velocity (of the free electrons) is only about 0.024
cm/sec!"

The key factor is the generation, by the oscillating electrons, of RF
photons/fields/waves (traveling at the speed of light) .
--
73, Cecil, w5dxp.com

Art Unwin October 8th 10 03:57 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Oct 8, 2:14*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Uzytkownik "John Smith" napisal w ...

On 10/7/2010 10:35 AM, Szczepan Bialek wrote:


...
In each radiator is a stream of electrons. The oscillating pump is in the
transmitter. But where is the tank with the electrons?
...


Now, that is just plain silly! *How are you going to Bismuth plate an
oscillating electron pump? *straight face

Art wrote: "What do you think?"

So I wrote that antennas are made of metalic conductors, salt waters and
live tree. It seem that material is not important.
The key factor is the oscillating, nonsymetrical flow of electrons. We need
the tank, the pump and an antenna. May be with or without Bismuth plate.
S*


The implication by many is that the radiation particles or electrons
are extracted from the actual radiator.
Where did this notion come from and what is its justification?

[email protected] October 8th 10 07:00 PM

Antenna materials
 
Szczepan Bialek wrote:

So I wrote that antennas are made of metalic conductors, salt waters and
live tree. It seem that material is not important.


That's because you are a babbling idiot.

The material is very important in the real world.

The key factor is the oscillating, nonsymetrical flow of electrons. We need
the tank, the pump and an antenna. May be with or without Bismuth plate.
S*


Babbling, kook, word salad, nonsense.


--
Jim Pennino

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