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On Sun, 3 Apr 2011 09:43:27 -0700 (PDT), Tom Horne
wrote: What I hope to achieve is to maintain the gain of the stacked, out of phase, dual half wave antenna on two meters AND trap the lower have wave to a single half wave on seventy centimeters. Hi Tom, Right off the bat (yes I can see the article now) you offer a conflict. Out of phase blurs gain (lowers it). Your statement suggests you are losing from the start. However, it could simply be wording. Let's make this simple: 1. State the gain at the frequencies of interest before the change; 2. State the gain at those frequencies you expect after the change. Here are the steps I was thinking of: Fabricate a trap from 1/2" copper pipe coming out of a tee that has been cut in half through a plane perpendicular to the foot of the tee. Lost already - sorry. Remove the top half wave and the phasing loop from the existing collinear dual half wave antenna Attach the stub to the lower half wave so that the open bottom end of the stub is one half wave on UHF from the top of the matching stub. 1Measure the SWR on 446 MHz. of the newly trapped two meter radiator. 2Adjust stub location for minimum SWR at 446 MHz. 3Measure SWR at 146 MHz. 4Shorten that radiator to lowest SWR on two meters or until the two SWR readings for VHF & UHF are equal. Probably not. You are going to be repeating steps 1-4 to even approach this desired end condition. 5Reattach the upper two meter half wave and phasing stub. 6Measure antenna for SWR on both VHF & UHF again 7Adjust length of of upper two meter half wave if necessary. This will disturb the work done in steps 1-4. You cannot rely on that configuration being isolated from the work in steps 5-7 which will also demand repeated attention. However, proceed with 5-7 repeats until you obtain the desired end condition. NOW, revisit steps 1-4 with everything attached. I may be wrong, but I suspect you will need to trim things here again. And guess what? This means you need to visit and repeat steps 5-7 again. And guess what? You will be visiting steps 1-4 AND 5-7 again, and again. Take heart, these revisits "should" result in ever smaller adjustments. That means you will approach your desired end condition asymptotically. The antenna analyzer that I will use will be an AEA Technology SWR Meter: 140-525. It happens to be what I have available to me. Does my process seem to be along the right line or would you suggest a different order of operations? The order is quite rational and fully expected. You are entirely on the right track. Your experience will reveal how much they are interactive and how sensitive all this is. If you anticipate the amount of repeated operations and plan accordingly, it will go far more quickly. Epilogue I would note that your writer does not offer any testing of sufficient caliber to support the claims of the EZNEC model. He merely provides signal reports using a sophisticated instrument (a spectrum analyzer that is not being used for spectrum analysis). Those reports also tell me that there is at best 1.2dB gain over a 1/4 wave design - very underwhelming. The only SWR data is reported as "The SWR was low." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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