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![]() Al wrote: I have used Reg's fine loop design program rjeloop3 to help me with building a couple of loops. It was a big help. Thank you Reg. The shielded three-foot diameter loop I built is for receive only. The primary loop is six turns paralleled by a variable capacitor, and the secondary (link loop) is one turn (same diameter) fed to a preamp or directly to the receiver. The band of operation of the loop is about 200kHz to 500kHz (NDB chaser). One question that is not answered in rjeloop3 is what should be the distance from the output (link) loop to the main loop? The antenna's I built used flat cable for the wiring and one of the turns was the link so the distance was 0.050 inches. In other articles I have read that the Q, gain, and S/N ratio can be varied by varying the distance between the two loops. Approximately what is the distance? Are we talking a small fraction of an inch or 2, 3, or perhaps six inches apart? I would just like a feeler distance to work with. If the distance is to be over one inch, I'm considering building the primary loop in one hoola-hoop form and the secondary loop in a second hoola-hoop then varying the distance between the hoops. Any thoughts on this or is this a waste of time and effort? All input will be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Al KA5JGV I don't know if this will help, but perhaps you can adopt the idea to your loop. I built a receiving mag loop for 40 - 160 as follows: Using hardline, I stripped the ends so the center conductor stuck out about 1 inch on each end. I made the outer loop out of it - it is ~4' in diameter. It is open at the top, and a variable capacitor (900 pF) connects the two ends on the shield of the hardline. (I switch in another 1650 pF for 160). Inner loop is made from 52" of the inner conductor and insulation of RG8 and is mounted at the bottom. The two ends of the inner loop connect to the SO239. At the top of the outer loop, the copper inner hardline conductor connects to a 1N4148 with 1K in series and a 1 mA meter. When I excite the inner loop with my MFJ 259B, I tune for minimum SWR with the variable cap. The 1mA meter goes to maximum when the SWR goes to minimum. Ok, now to the coupling. The inner loop can be maneuvered for maximum reading on the 1 mA meter. I found I get the highest reading on the meter when I squash the inner loop into an oval, decreasing its vertical diameter to about 1/2 what it was when it was a circle. I taped the inner loop to the outer loop to hold the shape with the maximum coupling. Perhaps some variation of this technique can be used on your antenna. I'm still experimenting with my loop. The tuning on 40 is difficult - I need a smaller variable cap. I plan to try switching out 450 pF of the variable (it is currently 2 450's in parallel), and switching in some series fixed C to see if I can cover 40 with a 180 degree rotation of the variable - right now a few degrees of rotation of the variable makes a very large change in the frequency. |
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