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On Mon, 10 May 2004 03:12:05 GMT, "Jerry Martes"
wrote: I'm condidering building a slotted line for measuring impedance at 137 MHz. I find no referances to home made lines thru my quick Google search. Does anyone know of any publication that show how someone has already worked out the problems of contructing one? Jerry Hi Jerry, It is not all that hard to do in fact. HP solved that problem long ago by thinking outside of the box by thinking box. As with other test equipment issues, it is simply a matter of planning and testing with very simple methods. For those whose greatest physical effort in Ham radio is sliding a credit card across the showroom display counter, this is called "work." Basically you construct your coaxial line with the usual interior line, but unlike the conventional expectations, you do not try to emulate the outer portion as a cylinder. You construct the outer portion as two parallel conductive planes (appropriately shorted to the connector shells at each end (hence the allusion to box): view HP 805C Slotted Line picture on ebay at: http://web.ask.com/redir?bpg=http%3a...html&qte=0&o=0 Where the two planes stand apart, you insert a probe to measure the potential along the line. The depth of the line within and in between the two parallel surfaces insures the line isolation (no leakage) as well as preserving the line characteristic Z. However, anyway that you look at it (even the lecher line suffers from this) you run the risk of over coupling and throwing the measurement into confusion (very simple to make errors). The problem is the probe will introduce its own SWR and gum up the works if it lacks sensitivity. I won't bother too much with dimensions here, but instead offer a formula for such a structu Zc = (138/sqrt(e))·log(4h/pi·d) where e: dielectric constant (= 1 for air) d: interior line diameter h: wall separation You will want to build it long enough to be more than a wavelength of course. You will also need to calibrate it to determine the residual SWR it presents to the system (this will reveal construction errors). Off hand, I would suggest that the walls be roughly a 2 to 4 cm apart and at least a 20 cm wide (larger wouldn't hurt). Build one quick and dirty to get your gross mistakes out of the way without spending too much time on them. I can guarantee no one here could build it right the first time (including yours truly). Once you've got the first pass attempt on the bench, then we can talk about how to use it right. ;-) 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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