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Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna'son my homepage
On 02/23/2011 10:00 AM, RadioWaves wrote:
Today I have put my homepage online with information about the Magnetic Loop Antenna. http://www.qsl.net/pa7nr/ PA7NR Hmmm. A "magnetic" loop antenna. Must be some other types of loop antennas as well. Maybe there are also "electric" loop antennas. Guess they left something out of all those antenna textbooks I have ;-) Sincerely, and 73s from N4GGO, -- J. B. Wood e-mail: |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's onmy homepage
On 2 mar, 13:58, "J.B. Wood" wrote:
On 02/23/2011 10:00 AM, RadioWaves wrote: Today I have put my homepage online with information about the Magnetic Loop Antenna. http://www.qsl.net/pa7nr/ PA7NR Hmmm. *A "magnetic" loop antenna. *Must be some other types of loop antennas as well. *Maybe there are also "electric" loop antennas. Guess they left something out of all those antenna textbooks I have ;-) Sincerely, and 73s from N4GGO, -- J. B. Wood * * * * * * * * *e-mail: Hello John, When you cut the loop at two opposite positions, yes, you can make your "electric" loop. It will generate lots of E-field, you may need another coil for matching, and it is probably less efficient then a short straight dipole with massive capacitive disks to get larger I*delta(le) product. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl In case of PM, please remove abc first. |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna'son my homepage
On 3/2/2011 8:40 AM, Wimpie wrote:
On 2 mar, 13:58, "J.B. wrote: On 02/23/2011 10:00 AM, RadioWaves wrote: Today I have put my homepage online with information about the Magnetic Loop Antenna. http://www.qsl.net/pa7nr/ PA7NR Hmmm. A "magnetic" loop antenna. Must be some other types of loop antennas as well. Maybe there are also "electric" loop antennas. Guess they left something out of all those antenna textbooks I have ;-) Sincerely, and 73s from N4GGO, -- J. B. Wood e-mail: Hello John, When you cut the loop at two opposite positions, yes, you can make your "electric" loop. It will generate lots of E-field, you may need another coil for matching, and it is probably less efficient then a short straight dipole with massive capacitive disks to get larger I*delta(le) product. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl In case of PM, please remove abc first. Hello, and the not-so-subtle point is that there aren't magnetic, electric, or any other such "types" of loop antennas. There are just loop antennas that can further be described as shielded/unshielded, balanced/unbalanced, electrically small or large. Just like we don't transmit (propagate) electric (E) or magnetic (H) fields by themselves. The purpose of an antenna is to radiate and/or intercept an electromagnetic field. By definition energy radiated by a transmitting antenna is not temporarily stored in the antenna's local electric or magnetic field. It's been released into free space subject to interception by a receiving antenna(s) or any other parasitic structures. The receiving antenna transfers part the intercepted energy to the load (receiver and other dissipative losses) and scatters the rest back into free space. By contrast, a transformer, for example, is a "magnetic" device that is intended to transfer energy by a localized means (induction) other than the propagation/interception of electromagnetic radiation. To further confuse the issue, a conductor in the near (reactive) field of a transmitting antenna will have current induced in it by the antenna's local electric and/or magnetic fields. However, that's not the usual purpose for which we design antennas. An exception might be the immoboliser (PATS) system used in late-model motor vehicles that incorporates a ring antenna embedded in the steering column that is closely coupled at RF frequencies to the transponder chip and loop antenna embedded in the vehicle ignition key. So is it a transmit-receive antenna configuration or a primary coil-secondary coil transformer configuration? Given the proximity of the inserted key to the steering column I would guess the latter. Sincerely, -- J. B. Wood e-mail: |
OK, IF you just wanted to buy a magnetic loop antenna vs build one, what are the ones to look at that are for sale, and why ? AEA once made one when I left Tampa and lived out west in Seattle. I live in a small, non deed restricted house in Tampa with a flat membrane roof. I could get a loop on my roof I suppose, if the installation looked clean.
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Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's onmy homepage
Hello John,
On 2 mar, 18:14, "J.B. Wood" wrote: On 3/2/2011 8:40 AM, Wimpie wrote: On 2 mar, 13:58, "J.B. *wrote: On 02/23/2011 10:00 AM, RadioWaves wrote: *Today I have put my homepage online with information about the Magnetic Loop Antenna. http://www.qsl.net/pa7nr/ PA7NR Hmmm. *A "magnetic" loop antenna. *Must be some other types of loop antennas as well. *Maybe there are also "electric" loop antennas. Guess they left something out of all those antenna textbooks I have ;-) Sincerely, and 73s from N4GGO, -- J. B. Wood * * * * * * * * *e-mail: Hello John, When you cut the loop at two opposite positions, yes, you can make your "electric" loop. It will generate lots of E-field, you may need another coil for matching, and it is probably less efficient then a short straight dipole with massive capacitive disks to get larger I*delta(le) product. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl In case of PM, please remove abc first. Hello, and the not-so-subtle point is that there aren't magnetic, electric, or any other such "types" of loop antennas. *There are just loop antennas that can further be described as shielded/unshielded, balanced/unbalanced, electrically small or large. *Just like we don't transmit (propagate) electric (E) or magnetic (H) fields by themselves. The purpose of an antenna is to radiate and/or intercept an electromagnetic field. *By definition energy radiated by a transmitting antenna is not temporarily stored in the antenna's local electric or magnetic field. *It's been released into free space subject to interception by a receiving antenna(s) or any other parasitic structures. *The receiving antenna transfers part the intercepted energy to the load (receiver and other dissipative losses) and scatters the rest back into free space. By contrast, a transformer, for example, is a "magnetic" device that is intended to transfer energy by a localized means (induction) other than the propagation/interception of electromagnetic radiation. If in your opinion there do not exist antennas that generate a dominant magnetic or electric field (in the near field), then you are contradicting yourself, as you can't transfer energy with a magnetic field or electric field only. So your transformer also involves electric fields. Maybe you should look into the Poynting theorem. To further confuse the issue, a conductor in the near (reactive) field of a transmitting antenna will have current induced in it by the antenna's local electric and/or magnetic fields. *However, that's not the usual purpose for which we design antennas. *An exception might be the immoboliser (PATS) system used in late-model motor vehicles that incorporates a ring antenna embedded in the steering column that is closely coupled at RF frequencies to the transponder chip and loop antenna embedded in the vehicle ignition key. *So is it a transmit-receive antenna configuration or a primary coil-secondary coil transformer configuration? *Given the proximity of the inserted key to the steering column I would guess the latter. *Sincerely, -- J. B. Wood * * * * * * * * *e-mail: When a noise source is about 5..10m away from an 3.6 MHz antenna, the coupling of that noise source towards a "magnetic" loop antenna may be different from the coupling towards an "electric" antenna, though both antennas may produce the same far field radiation. This is not from a textbook, but from experience (I am also working in power electronics). I fully agree with you on the far field statements, but when you live in an apartment (where significant spurious emission from home equipment are in the near field of your 3.6 MHz antenna), a so-called magnetic loop antenna may behave different (w.r.t. a short "electric" dipole). It can be worse or better. Many radio amateurs know this from experiments, without knowing the EM theory behind it. I have no problems when people talk about a "magnetic loop antenna". It shows me that they are discussing an antenna with a circumference 0.2 lambda. When people talk about a "loop antenna", it can be anything. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's on my homepage
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 12:56:23 -0800 (PST), Wimpie
wrote: When a noise source is about 5..10m away from an 3.6 MHz antenna, the coupling of that noise source towards a "magnetic" loop antenna may be different from the coupling towards an "electric" antenna, though both antennas may produce the same far field radiation. This is not from a textbook, but from experience (I am also working in power electronics). Text books would enlarge that volume to one half to several wavelengths for the "near field." The text books would further clarify this with math (yes, I know, professional and academic discussion in light of this being an amateur forum is anathema) and define the difference with the terms Fresnel diffraction (near-field) and Fraunhofer diffraction (far-field). The operative physical length of the antenna becomes meaningful, but this is getting ahead of what I call the "benchmark" method below. To give the magnetic loop aficionados the benefit of this, all local noise within 100 feet would be susceptible to interfering and it wouldn't be nullable (which is a characteristic only observed in the far-field) except by polarization which is very haphazard in the near-field. I have never seen a magnetic loop mount with the necessary degrees of freedom to employ this method of "nulling." As such, the vaunted characteristic is elusive and thus becomes legendary rather than fulfilled. However, the term "near-field" is rather vague. The more appropriate discussion is found in "reactive near field" and "radiative near field." The discussion of loop coupling to magnetic (while ignoring electric) fields would suggest "reactive near field." In this regard, the 80M volume of reactive interference is still roughly 100 feet in all directions. The "radiative near field" would encompass a volume out to 80 meters (roughly 250 feet). In either case, apartment living finds no panacea in loop antennas. There is another, non-textual (at least to the casual reader), benchmark that such issues are measured by the physical spread of the antenna itself (this usually attends discussion of capture area to many's frustration). Here, I am returning to the allusion above of Fresnel diffraction (near-field) and Fraunhofer diffraction (far-field). The math (non-techs, turn your eyes away) is as simple as: 2·D²/lambda Let's work some examples from the sublime to the ridiculous on 80M. The traditional half-wave dipole antenna that exhibits the traditional usage for distinguishing between near and far: 2·40²/80 = 40 meters a smaller quarter-wave dipole antenna 2·20²/80 = 10 meters a tenth wave dipole antenna 2·8²/80 = 1.6 meters a fortieth wave dipole antenna 2·2²/80 = 10 centimeters Let's see where discussion follows in this regard. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's onmy homepage
Hello Richard,
On 2 mar, 23:10, Richard Clark wrote: On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 12:56:23 -0800 (PST), Wimpie wrote: When a noise source is about 5..10m *away from an 3.6 MHz antenna, the coupling of that noise source towards a "magnetic" loop antenna may be different *from the coupling towards an "electric" antenna, though both antennas may produce the same far field radiation. *This is not from a textbook, but from experience (I am also working in power electronics). Text books would enlarge that volume to one half to several wavelengths for the "near field." *The text books would further clarify this with math (yes, I know, professional and academic discussion in light of this being an amateur forum is anathema) and define the difference with the terms Fresnel diffraction (near-field) and Fraunhofer diffraction (far-field). *The operative physical length of the antenna becomes meaningful, but this is getting ahead of what I call the "benchmark" method below. To give the magnetic loop aficionados the benefit of this, all local noise within 100 feet would be susceptible to interfering and it wouldn't be nullable (which is a characteristic only observed in the far-field) except by polarization which is very haphazard in the near-field. *I have never seen a magnetic loop mount with the necessary degrees of freedom to employ this method of "nulling." *As such, the vaunted characteristic is elusive and thus becomes legendary rather than fulfilled. However, the term "near-field" is rather vague. *The more appropriate discussion is found in "reactive near field" and "radiative near field." *The discussion of loop coupling to magnetic (while ignoring electric) fields would suggest "reactive near field." *In this regard, the 80M volume of reactive interference is still roughly 100 feet in all directions. *The "radiative near field" would encompass a volume out to 80 meters (roughly 250 feet). *In either case, apartment living finds no panacea in loop antennas. There is another, non-textual (at least to the casual reader), benchmark that such issues are measured by the physical spread of the antenna itself (this usually attends discussion of capture area to many's frustration). *Here, I am returning to the allusion above of Fresnel diffraction (near-field) and Fraunhofer diffraction (far-field). *The math (non-techs, turn your eyes away) is as simple as: * * * * 2 D /lambda Let's work some examples from the sublime to the ridiculous on 80M. The traditional half-wave dipole antenna that exhibits the traditional usage for distinguishing between near and far: * * * * 2 40 /80 = 40 meters a smaller quarter-wave dipole antenna * * * * 2 20 /80 = 10 meters a tenth wave dipole antenna * * * * 2 8 /80 = 1.6 meters a fortieth wave dipole antenna * * * * 2 2 /80 = 10 centimeters Let's see where discussion follows in this regard. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC where is your square? Fraunhofer region starts at (22.5 degrees phase shift): r = 2*D^2/lambda D = largest antenna size (excluding structures that doesn't carry current). Formula is only valid for electrically large structures, so not an electrically small loop or dipole. For electrically small loops, reactive fields are dominant for: r 0.16*lambda Smaller loop size does not result in smaller reactive field zone. The correct formulas you can find everywhere. To make it easy for you: http://www.conformity.com/past/0102reflections.html shows the complete formulas for the electric and magnetic case, and a graph at the end. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's on my homepage
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 17:40:15 +0000, ka7niq
wrote: OK, IF you just wanted to buy a magnetic loop antenna vs build one, what are the ones to look at that are for sale, and why ? AEA once made one when I left Tampa and lived out west in Seattle. I live in a small, non deed restricted house in Tampa with a flat membrane roof. I could get a loop on my roof I suppose, if the installation looked clean. Hi OM, The specifications of the major vendors that I have seen are usually reliable. You still need to answer what bands do you want to transmit on? If it is 40M and up, you are pretty sure to find a lot of useful designs. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's on my homepage
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 15:29:55 -0800 (PST), Wimpie
wrote: Formula is only valid for electrically large structures, so not an electrically small loop or dipole. "Large" or "small" are not quantities. For electrically small loops, reactive fields are dominant for: and how small (quantifiable) is small (qualifiable)? r 0.16*lambda given that I have already demonstrated that, and more, what importance do you attach to this that hasn't already been shown? Smaller loop size does not result in smaller reactive field zone. What a curious defense for magnetic antennas's noise immunity. However, the magnetic antenna is not immune from the reactive fields of noise emitters that are very much larger than any loop discussed here. It is the field of the emitter that is important. I thought I would wait and see if anyone cottoned on to that aspect of the discussion. If we proceed with the assumption (repeated here): Smaller loop size does not result in smaller reactive field zone. then the magnetic antenna is doomed to noise in the same sense as an electric antenna is. Offhand I would speculate that in an apartment situation, a magnetic antenna on the balcony is saturated with reactive noise fields. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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On 3/2/2011 6:50 PM, Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 15:29:55 -0800 (PST), wrote: Formula is only valid for electrically large structures, so not an electrically small loop or dipole. "Large" or "small" are not quantities. For electrically small loops, reactive fields are dominant for: and how small (quantifiable) is small (qualifiable)? r 0.16*lambda given that I have already demonstrated that, and more, what importance do you attach to this that hasn't already been shown? Smaller loop size does not result in smaller reactive field zone. What a curious defense for magnetic antennas's noise immunity. However, the magnetic antenna is not immune from the reactive fields of noise emitters that are very much larger than any loop discussed here. Very much larger is not a quantity. How much larger? It is the field of the emitter that is important. I thought I would wait and see if anyone cottoned on to that aspect of the discussion. If we proceed with the assumption (repeated here): Smaller loop size does not result in smaller reactive field zone. then the magnetic antenna is doomed to noise in the same sense as an electric antenna is. Offhand I would speculate that in an apartment situation, a magnetic antenna on the balcony is saturated with reactive noise fields. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's onmy homepage
Hello Richard,
What a curious defense for magnetic antennas's noise immunity. Where did I mention that this relates to noise immunity? I only tried to point you to a misconception regarding the use of the 2*D^2/lambda formula. [start quote] The traditional half-wave dipole antenna that exhibits the traditional usage for distinguishing between near and far: 2 40 /80 = 40 meters a smaller quarter-wave dipole antenna 2 20 /80 = 10 meters a tenth wave dipole antenna 2 8 /80 = 1.6 meters a fortieth wave dipole antenna 2 2 /80 = 10 centimeters Let's see where discussion follows in this regard. [end quote] You want to believe us that a usable antenna with size=2m and lambda=80m satisfies far field conditions at 10 cm, I really hope I understood you wrong. However, the magnetic antenna is not immune from the reactive fields of noise emitters that are very much larger than any loop discussed here. It is the field of the emitter that is important. I thought I would wait and see if anyone cottoned on to that aspect of the discussion. If we proceed with the assumption (repeated here): The dominant reactive field from a small "magnetic" loop or "electric" antenna at lambda=80m extends to somewhat more then 10cm, think of about 5m. Though the far fields may be similar, the reactive fields are completely different in orientation, strength and E/H ratio. See for example the link posted earlier: http://www.conformity.com/past/0102reflections.html This will result in complete different coupling to conductors present in the reactive field zone. When using reciprocity, this will also affect the coupling from noise current in the conductors towards the antenna. So I can't follow your statement below: wimpie: Smaller loop size does not result in smaller reactive field zone. then the magnetic antenna is doomed to noise in the same sense as an electric antenna is. Of course I agree with you for the case the noise source extends over large distance. What antenna is better, you cannot say beforehand and is food for the experimenter (as I mentioned earlier). This topic becomes lengthy. Do you think that it will result in better statements from other people on there websites (that was the subject of my first contribution)? The second part was just to show that the 3% claim for a 4 m loop (circumference) at 80m isn't bad. I have real doubts about it, so I decided to send PM to Norbert some days ago to setup a more constructive discussion. With kind regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's on my homepage
On Wed, 02 Mar 2011 19:01:55 -0600, John - KD5YI
wrote: Very much larger is not a quantity. How much larger? Twice - at least. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Information about my experience with Magnetic Loop antenna's on my homepage
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 18:34:12 -0800 (PST), Wimpie
wrote: http://www.conformity.com/past/0102reflections.html This will result in complete different coupling to conductors present in the reactive field zone. When using reciprocity, this will also affect the coupling from noise current in the conductors towards the antenna. Reciprocity does not appear in the text at your link and the concept you are offering appears to be an invention that is unsupported. Let's stick with unraveling one thing at a time. So, working with your link's assertions give me a simple quantified indicator of a reactive field. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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On 3 mar, 09:27, Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 18:34:12 -0800 (PST), Wimpie wrote: http://www.conformity.com/past/0102reflections.html This will result in complete different coupling to conductors present in the reactive field zone. When using reciprocity, this will also affect the coupling from noise current in the conductors towards the antenna. Reciprocity does not appear in the text at your link and the concept you are offering appears to be an invention that is unsupported. Let's stick with unraveling one thing at a time. So, working with your link's assertions give me a simple quantified indicator of a reactive field. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hello Richard, As I assume you understand complex calculus, that link ( http://www.conformity.com/past/0102reflections.html ) was just to help you to figure out field orientation and strength versus distance for the magnetic and electrical case. If you still believe in the 2*D^2/lambda far field formula for electrically small antennas, I doubt whether it is useful to continue. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl |
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On 03/02/2011 03:56 PM, Wimpie wrote:
If in your opinion there do not exist antennas that generate a dominant magnetic or electric field (in the near field), then you are contradicting yourself, as you can't transfer energy with a magnetic field or electric field only. So your transformer also involves electric fields. Maybe you should look into the Poynting theorem. Hello, and that is correct. The Maxwell equations apply in all these cases. When solving such problems, especially when dealing with antennas, the total E-M field contains both reactive (electric/capacitive & magnetic/inductive) and radiative components, although certain components predominate depending on distance from the excited structure. When dealing with A.C. circuit problems where dimensions are a fraction of a wavelength, one can usually ignore the the radiative/propagation components. Why solve a problem with a sledgehammer when a small claw hammer is adequate? Wouldn't you rather use Ohm's law in such case rather than dealing with E and H fields? For example, the behavior of A.C. power power distribution lines operating a 60 Hz can certainly be modeled using transmission line equations but unless they're very long (implying a propagation delay), a lumped-element/circuit approach is much more easily dealt with (lumped lines. And yes, I'm intimately familiar with the Poynting theorem and its derivation. (The designers of the CFA obviously weren't). When a noise source is about 5..10m away from an 3.6 MHz antenna, the coupling of that noise source towards a "magnetic" loop antenna may be different from the coupling towards an "electric" antenna, though both antennas may produce the same far field radiation. This is not from a textbook, but from experience (I am also working in power electronics). There's no such thing as "magnetic" and "electric" antennas. The marketing departments of antenna vendors or others can call these whatever they want but they can't change the laws of physics. Now, if one dimensions a loop antenna or dipole antenna small enough (compared to a wavelength, one obtains a magnetic or electric dipole, respectively. Such dipoles (note the absence of the word "antenna") are a theoretical concept but can be applied in practice to those structures having electrically small radiators/interceptors. I fully agree with you on the far field statements, but when you live in an apartment (where significant spurious emission from home equipment are in the near field of your 3.6 MHz antenna), a so-called magnetic loop antenna may behave different (w.r.t. a short "electric" dipole). It can be worse or better. Many radio amateurs know this from experiments, without knowing the EM theory behind it. Hey, I'm a fellow Ham and well aware of the contributions over the years by hams to antenna design. Many times, however, established electromagnetic theory is distorted to match the perceived observation. In the case of noise immunity I would discuss the size of the victim antenna, the antenna type (e.g. loop or dipole), antenna dimensions, orientation and proximity wrt the offending noise source, and whether the victim antenna is shielded and balanced. Unless one is referring to an electrically small antenna treated as a magnetic or electric dipole, typing an antenna as "magnetic" or "electric" is meaningless. -- J. B. Wood e-mail: |
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Hello John,
On 3 mar, 13:30, "J.B. Wood" wrote: On 03/02/2011 03:56 PM, Wimpie wrote: If in your opinion there do not exist antennas that generate a dominant magnetic or electric field (in the near field), then you are contradicting yourself, as you can't transfer energy with a magnetic field or electric field only. So your transformer also involves electric fields. Maybe you should look into the Poynting theorem. Hello, and that is correct. The Maxwell equations apply in all these cases. When solving such problems, especially when dealing with antennas, the total E-M field contains both reactive (electric/capacitive & magnetic/inductive) and radiative components, although certain components predominate depending on distance from the excited structure. When dealing with A.C. circuit problems where dimensions are a fraction of a wavelength, one can usually ignore the the radiative/propagation components. Why solve a problem with a sledgehammer when a small claw hammer is adequate? Wouldn't you rather use Ohm's law in such case rather than dealing with E and H fields? For example, the behavior of A.C. power power distribution lines operating a 60 Hz can certainly be modeled using transmission line equations but unless they're very long (implying a propagation delay), a lumped-element/circuit approach is much more easily dealt with (lumped lines. And yes, I'm intimately familiar with the Poynting theorem and its derivation. (The designers of the CFA obviously weren't). Whoops, we have to be careful to not getting involved in a new discussion, but I agree on your statement regarding that "special" antenna and the statements regarding whether or not to use distributed versus lumped circuit approach. When a noise source is about 5..10m away from an 3.6 MHz antenna, the coupling of that noise source towards a "magnetic" loop antenna may be different from the coupling towards an "electric" antenna, though both antennas may produce the same far field radiation. This is not from a textbook, but from experience (I am also working in power electronics). There's no such thing as "magnetic" and "electric" antennas. That is why I added the word "dominant", as you can't transfer energy with H or E only and we were discussing small antennas as shown on Norberts website. One may imagine the electrically small magnetic loop antenna as the primary of a transformer where there is no secondary coil in the reactive field. The RF leakage (far field radiation) by accident hit the antenna of another amateur. The marketing departments of antenna vendors or others can call these whatever they want but they can't change the laws of physics. Now, if one dimensions a loop antenna or dipole antenna small enough (compared to a wavelength, one obtains a magnetic or electric dipole, respectively. Such dipoles (note the absence of the word "antenna") are a theoretical concept but can be applied in practice to those structures having electrically small radiators/interceptors. I fully agree with you on the far field statements, but when you live in an apartment (where significant spurious emission from home equipment are in the near field of your 3.6 MHz antenna), a so-called magnetic loop antenna may behave different (w.r.t. a short "electric" dipole). It can be worse or better. Many radio amateurs know this from experiments, without knowing the EM theory behind it. Hey, I'm a fellow Ham and well aware of the contributions over the years by hams to antenna design. Many times, however, established electromagnetic theory is distorted to match the perceived observation. I agree on the above. Let I mention the two letters "EH" in addition to your three-letter combination to avoid a new discussion... In the case of noise immunity I would discuss the size of the victim antenna, the antenna type (e.g. loop or dipole), antenna dimensions, orientation and proximity wrt the offending noise source, and whether the victim antenna is shielded and balanced. Unless one is referring to an electrically small antenna treated as a magnetic or electric dipole, typing an antenna as "magnetic" or "electric" is meaningless. With kind regards, Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl |
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On 3/3/2011 1:35 AM, Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 02 Mar 2011 19:01:55 -0600, John - wrote: Very much larger is not a quantity. How much larger? Twice - at least. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC So from twice to infinity. Still not a quantity. You seem to have the same problem for which you berate others. |
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On Thu, 3 Mar 2011 02:37:34 -0800 (PST), Wimpie
wrote: So, working with your link's assertions give me a simple quantified indicator of a reactive field. As I assume you understand complex calculus, that link ( http://www.conformity.com/past/0102reflections.html ) was just to help you to figure out field orientation and strength versus distance for the magnetic and electrical case. OK, so you cannot present a simple quantified indicator of a reactive field from your own source. It is quite apparent without going into math (I thought that appeals to professionalism and academics like complex calculus were verboten here) and I see it quite plainly ILLUSTRATED in Figure 3. However, if you cannot vouchsafe for this source and agree to what it represents, you are right, there is no basis for discussion. If you still believe in the 2*D^2/lambda far field formula for electrically small antennas, I doubt whether it is useful to continue. I wish you wouldn't interpret beliefs and simple stick to what I've written. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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On Thu, 03 Mar 2011 11:17:40 -0600, John - KD5YI
wrote: So from twice to infinity. Still not a quantity. You seem to have the same problem for which you berate others. 2 (twice) is not a number? The antenna most frequently discussed is a 40th wave or 2 meters across. These are two more numbers (40th and 2). Twice that yields to more numbers (20th and 4). Infinity is not a number. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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On 3/3/2011 3:21 PM, Richard Clark wrote:
On Thu, 03 Mar 2011 11:17:40 -0600, John - wrote: So from twice to infinity. Still not a quantity. You seem to have the same problem for which you berate others. 2 (twice) is not a number? The antenna most frequently discussed is a 40th wave or 2 meters across. These are two more numbers (40th and 2). Twice that yields to more numbers (20th and 4). Infinity is not a number. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC You didn't say twice. You said "twice - at least". So what number is that, Dick? I was taught that the phrase represented a range, not a number. All you did was put a lower bound on a number you don't know. |
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On Thu, 03 Mar 2011 17:14:54 -0600, John - KD5YI
wrote: All you did was put a lower bound on a number you don't know. However, the magnetic antenna is not immune from the reactive fields of noise emitters that are very much larger than any loop discussed here. Choose a "loop discussed here," and you have a number (1, 1.6, 2, and 4). Double (at least) that number, for that loop, and you have a new number for the noise emitter (2, 3.2, 4, and 8). If you want to more than double the original number (1, 1.6, 2, and 4), there are probably practical examples of noise emitters for those numbers too. The lower bound works as a practical matter but is not exclusive of other practical, larger emitters. One common example would be the standard 80M dipole which would give you a number of 40, but that is not the upper bound. So, having said double (2, 3.2, 4, and 8) at least (which allows up to 40 which is more than twice any previous number) and there being larger numbers that satisfy the observation, the larger numbers become an issue of practicality, not number. There are Rhombics (certainly impractical for many) that have dimensions of 320 meters: http://www.pa6z.nl/PROJECTS/ANTENNAS...y_rhombic.html I suppose now the point to argue is "Is 40 (or 320) very much larger than 1?" For the benefit of Wimpie and beliefs: "I would believe so, although I am open to convincing argument that 40 (or 320) is NOT very much larger than 1." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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