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On 5/31/2011 1:52 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sat, 28 May 2011 14:25:47 -0700 (PDT), wrote: How many amateur radio operators use this kind of academic preening when they are putting up a dipole. Me, me, me. Even the simplest antenna is influenced by nearby structures, towers, poles, elevation, guy wires, position of coax feed, chain link fences, and grounding system. That makes a simple dipole not very simple. I've helped a few local hams model their houses allowing prediction of takeoff angles, mysterious nulls, optimum height, and cut length. While modeling (I use 4NEC2) does take some learning and understanding, it does offer an improvment over the tradition ham radio cut-n-try. Too much hand-waving here to be useful to most folks. Speak for yourself please. I like postings that are over my knowledge level so that I learn something new. It's also nice to know *WHY* things work, or don't. Learn by Destroying(tm). I agree, Jeff. I like antennas that are naturally short-circuited by design and can be grounded, making the feed point essentially grounded for DC and lower frequencies. One such antenna is the folded unipole. Its only problem is that the feedpoint resistance is about 120 or so ohms. So, I had this idea. The usual monopole (or ground plane) has about 30-35 ohms resistance. To get 50 ohms it is common practice to droop the radials about 45 degrees. Since that raises the feedpoint resistance, would raising the radials lower the feedpoint resistance of the folded unipole and, if so, what effect would it have on the pattern? EZNEC said to raise the radials of the folded unipole about 23 or so degrees to get 50 ohms and the pattern would not be affected. So I built one and it works swimmingly. I had to make some minor adjustments in element lengths but that was fairly easy with the vector voltmeter. Hooray for modeling. Cheers, John - KD5YI |
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