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béo-master October 20th 11 01:19 PM

Trap antenna
 
HI,

I picked up two coils that could be a trap for the CWA-840 COMET
antenna. (They have two stickers "CL-840").
The manual of the CWA-840 says : 40/80m dipole.

I found amazing that there isn't any capacitor in // of these coils...
These coils measure 76uH.
Could someone tell me how they works ?
In the manual of the CWA-840, each leg of the 7MHz section, is
11.1meters in lenght , wich, it seems to me, that it is rather longer
that 1/4 wave. (10.1m).
Why ?

Thanks a lot for your answers

CWA-840:

-----[ ]-------------ooo--//--
2.3m coil 11.1m balun


Sal[_3_] October 20th 11 11:28 PM

Trap antenna
 

"béo-master" wrote in message
. fr...
HI,

I picked up two coils that could be a trap for the CWA-840 COMET antenna.
(They have two stickers "CL-840").
The manual of the CWA-840 says : 40/80m dipole.

I found amazing that there isn't any capacitor in // of these coils...
These coils measure 76uH.
Could someone tell me how they works ?
In the manual of the CWA-840, each leg of the 7MHz section, is
11.1meters in lenght , wich, it seems to me, that it is rather longer
that 1/4 wave. (10.1m).
Why ?

Thanks a lot for your answers

CWA-840:

-----[ ]-------------ooo--//--
2.3m coil 11.1m balun


All coils are self-resonant at some frequency. Wind it right and off you
go!

"Sal"



John S October 20th 11 11:32 PM

Trap antenna
 
On 10/20/2011 5:28 PM, Sal wrote:
wrote in message
. fr...
HI,

I picked up two coils that could be a trap for the CWA-840 COMET antenna.
(They have two stickers "CL-840").
The manual of the CWA-840 says : 40/80m dipole.

I found amazing that there isn't any capacitor in // of these coils...
These coils measure 76uH.
Could someone tell me how they works ?
In the manual of the CWA-840, each leg of the 7MHz section, is
11.1meters in lenght , wich, it seems to me, that it is rather longer
that 1/4 wave. (10.1m).
Why ?

Thanks a lot for your answers

CWA-840:

-----[ ]-------------ooo--//--
2.3m coil 11.1m balun


All coils are self-resonant at some frequency. Wind it right and off you
go!

"Sal"



Good point, Sal. I hope the OP has a GDO to tell him the self-resonant
frequency. If not, there are other ways.

John, KD5YI



W5DXP October 21st 11 12:17 PM

Trap antenna
 
http://www.w8ji.com/traps.htm

Wayne October 21st 11 05:44 PM

Trap antenna
 


"W5DXP" wrote in message
...

http://www.w8ji.com/traps.htm

-
Cool!


Owen Duffy October 22nd 11 06:00 AM

Trap antenna
 
béo-master wrote in
. fr:

HI,

I picked up two coils that could be a trap for the CWA-840 COMET
antenna. (They have two stickers "CL-840").
The manual of the CWA-840 says : 40/80m dipole.

I found amazing that there isn't any capacitor in // of these coils...
These coils measure 76uH.


That is a rather simplistic characterisation of the trap. If you were to
measure its impedance over a wide range of frequency, the data would
give a better idea of the extent of any parallel capacitance (and there
has to be some, even if only stray capacitance. Somethimes the
capacitance is between some metal tubes that make the end supports for
the trap.

Note that measuring the impedance of traps is very challenging.

Could someone tell me how they works ?


The trap introduces some reactance and resistance that is intended with
appropriate conductor lengths, to give a modestly low VSWR at the
frequencies of interest.

The traditional explanation is that they are resonant at one of the
frequencies of operation, and act like a switch, cutting off current to
the outboard legs. Of course, current would flow in the outboard legs
eve if you used a physical switch.

That explanation is appealing, but limits your options. There are
advantages is making the resonant frequency of a trap fall outside the
bands of interest.

In the manual of the CWA-840, each leg of the 7MHz section, is
11.1meters in lenght , wich, it seems to me, that it is rather
longer that 1/4 wave. (10.1m).
Why ?


See above.

Thanks a lot for your answers

CWA-840:

-----[ ]-------------ooo--//--
2.3m coil 11.1m balun


The trap is probably self resonant below 40m... but that is just a guess
from experience of having designed such things.

Owen




béo-master October 22nd 11 08:56 AM

Trap antenna
 
Thanks a lot for your answers.
I have now most of the explainations.
Thanks for the links. (I had already read some)

Alejandro Lieber[_2_] October 22nd 11 11:21 AM

Trap antenna
 
On 10/20/2011 09:19 AM, béo-master wrote:
HI,

I picked up two coils that could be a trap for the CWA-840 COMET
antenna. (They have two stickers "CL-840").
The manual of the CWA-840 says : 40/80m dipole.

I found amazing that there isn't any capacitor in // of these coils...
These coils measure 76uH.
Could someone tell me how they works ?
In the manual of the CWA-840, each leg of the 7MHz section, is
11.1meters in lenght , wich, it seems to me, that it is rather longer
that 1/4 wave. (10.1m).
Why ?

Thanks a lot for your answers

CWA-840:

-----[ ]-------------ooo--//--
2.3m coil 11.1m balun

This is not a trap antenna:

1)- At 40 meters the coil works like a medium impedance insulator,76uH
represents 5300 ohms.

2)- At 80 meters, the antenna works like a vertical mobile antenna, the
coil resonates with the 2.3m section.

I made several of these antennas years ago, and the 40 meter section is
always longer than in a simple 40 meter dipole.
--
Alejandro Lieber LU1FCR
Rosario Argentina

Real-Time F2-Layer Critical Frequency Map foF2:
http://1fcr.com.ar

Jim Lux October 24th 11 06:21 PM

Trap antenna
 
On 10/21/2011 10:00 PM, Owen Duffy wrote:
wrote in
. fr:

HI,

I picked up two coils that could be a trap for the CWA-840 COMET
antenna. (They have two stickers "CL-840").
The manual of the CWA-840 says : 40/80m dipole.

I found amazing that there isn't any capacitor in // of these coils...
These coils measure 76uH.


That is a rather simplistic characterisation of the trap. If you were to
measure its impedance over a wide range of frequency, the data would
give a better idea of the extent of any parallel capacitance (and there
has to be some, even if only stray capacitance. Somethimes the
capacitance is between some metal tubes that make the end supports for
the trap.


or C from the winding of the coil to the surrounding tubing.

Or the "self C" of the coil (viz Medhurst's formulae for self C of an
inductor)

There's a goodly bit of empiricism in trap design. You can use basic
physics to calculate, but there's enough non-idealness in most
construction techniques that the calculations get you to a starting
point. (e.g. you could model the transition from the antenna element to
the coil in the trap with a lot of detail, or you could just build one
and try it, then adjust)



Note that measuring the impedance of traps is very challenging.

Could someone tell me how they works ?


The trap introduces some reactance and resistance that is intended with
appropriate conductor lengths, to give a modestly low VSWR at the
frequencies of interest.

The traditional explanation is that they are resonant at one of the
frequencies of operation, and act like a switch, cutting off current to
the outboard legs. Of course, current would flow in the outboard legs
eve if you used a physical switch.

That explanation is appealing, but limits your options. There are
advantages is making the resonant frequency of a trap fall outside the
bands of interes




Here's a (not very realistic) example of how it might work

Say you want an antenna that covers both 10m and 15m. You start with a
10 meter resonant antenna. Now hook a trap which has very high
impedance at 10m on the end of it. Since it's high Z, not much current
flows, so it doesn't change the 10m behavior very much. But, you also
want it to work at 15m. So you figure out how long an additional
element you need to put "outboard" of the trap to get the system to
resonate. Typically, the trap is a parallel LC, so below resonance, it
looks somewhat inductive. Since a short element looks capacitive, the
added length for 15m will be shorter than it would be without the trap.


There's a whole raft of design approaches about where you put the
resonance relative to the frequencies of use, and how you want the
current distribution to work, and then there's all the "what's practical
to make and manufacture" and "tolerance to misadjustment/weather/aging".

You can get a pretty good start with a modeling code like NEC, but
eventually, you've got to go out and start fiddling in real life,
because almost all traps are not precisely modeled by NEC for a variety
of reasons.



In the manual of the CWA-840, each leg of the 7MHz section, is
11.1meters in lenght , wich, it seems to me, that it is rather
longer that 1/4 wave. (10.1m).
Why ?


See above.

Thanks a lot for your answers

CWA-840:

-----[ ]-------------ooo--//--
2.3m coil 11.1m balun


The trap is probably self resonant below 40m... but that is just a guess
from experience of having designed such things.

Owen





Ian Wade G3NRW[_2_] October 26th 11 08:26 AM

Trap antenna
 
___Original Message_________________________________________
From: Jim Lux
Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2011 Time: 10:21:41

Say you want an antenna that covers both 10m and 15m. You start with a
10 meter resonant antenna. Now hook a trap which has very high
impedance at 10m on the end of it. Since it's high Z, not much current
flows, so it doesn't change the 10m behavior very much. But, you also
want it to work at 15m. So you figure out how long an additional
element you need to put "outboard" of the trap to get the system to
resonate. Typically, the trap is a parallel LC, so below resonance, it
looks somewhat inductive. Since a short element looks capacitive, the
added length for 15m will be shorter than it would be without the trap.


There's a whole raft of design approaches


Hi béo-master

Here is a simple trap antenna design tool that I have successfully used
a few times:

http://www.k7mem.150m.com/Electronic_Notebook/antennas/shortant.html

--
73
Ian, G3NRW

The AIM4170 Antenna Analyzer:
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/wadei/aim4170.htm


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