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#1
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I ended up with a 4 bay antenna that is resonant from 150 - 170.
How much work is it to put this on 2 meters? Rich L KB7YEB |
#2
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#3
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Rich:
Well, as 2m transmit is 144-148, the antenna will be too short for the 2m band, and the spacing of the 4 bays will be too close. Generally speaking, it's usually easier to cut down element length on a lower frequency antenna to bring it up to a higher frequency. Depending upon the design, this may not result in a reasonable gain figure for an individual antenna... I'm assuming that when you say 4-bay, you mean an antenna array with 4 separate antennas in a 2x2 (square) configuration, which for the original design frequency range, would have yielded nearly 6db of gain over a single antenna of the array. If you are serious about making the array work on 2m, the first thing you will need to do is to increase element lengths to bring resonance of the individual antennas within the 2m range. This may not result in near the gain the original antenna had at it's design frequency because the spacing of the elements will no longer be optimal. You might be able to model it in NEC, ezNEC or one of the other antenna programs to see what the current antenna gain and bandwidth figures are, and then change lengths of the elements (leaving the spacing the same) and see what the new antenna looks like.... Of course, even if it's ok, then you have to figure out how to "stretch" the elements to fit. Once you figure all of this out, and get a single antenna with decent gain at your frequency of interest, then you need to repeat it three more times, then connect them at the optimum spacing with an appropriate phasing harness for 2m operation.... If you haven't guessed by now, it may be easier to just sit down and make (or buy) an antenna with about the same gain figure the existing 4-bay has, and save yourself a lot of time. However, if you're willing to spend a bunch of time piddling around and aren't looking for optimum results, it can be a lot of fun to modify something like what you have, if you enjoy cut and try and have a lot of time on your hands... Good Luck --Rick AH7H wrote: I ended up with a 4 bay antenna that is resonant from 150 - 170. How much work is it to put this on 2 meters? Rich L KB7YEB |
#4
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We are assuming you have a 4 bay dipole array, common for commercial
use. Some of these are basic dipoles fed with a gamma match and it would be fairly easy to lengthen the elements and retune the gamma match. Other brands use a closed loop dipole and that would be a challenge to cut and lengthen. The phasing harness would be a specific length for 160mHz center freq and you may need to make a new one for optimum results on 2m. If the harness if too long or too short it may tend to pull the pattern up or down slightly from the horizon. Mike wrote: I ended up with a 4 bay antenna that is resonant from 150 - 170. How much work is it to put this on 2 meters? Rich L KB7YEB |
#5
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wrote in message
... I ended up with a 4 bay antenna that is resonant from 150 - 170. How much work is it to put this on 2 meters? Rich L KB7YEB I'd start with putting it on a (low power) radio and meter and seeing what SWR you come out with in the portion of the 2m band you intend to use it on. If it's less than 2:1 most would consider that acceptable. (Personally, I'd shoot for less, but that's me). Depending on how 'wide band' this thing is, it might cover 2m nicely. If you want to actually alter it for 2m, it will involve: Lengthening the antenna elements (2m is lower, so elements are longer) Lengthening the phasing elements Increasing the spacing between antenna elements. |
#6
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I sweep the antenna with a MFJ259B and found out the bandwidth.
The 2 meters match is over 7:1 . From the advice,it sounds like its a lot of work but good for parts thanks for all of your help RichL KB7YEB Tyas_MT wrote: wrote in message ... I ended up with a 4 bay antenna that is resonant from 150 - 170. How much work is it to put this on 2 meters? Rich L KB7YEB I'd start with putting it on a (low power) radio and meter and seeing what SWR you come out with in the portion of the 2m band you intend to use it on. If it's less than 2:1 most would consider that acceptable. (Personally, I'd shoot for less, but that's me). Depending on how 'wide band' this thing is, it might cover 2m nicely. If you want to actually alter it for 2m, it will involve: Lengthening the antenna elements (2m is lower, so elements are longer) Lengthening the phasing elements Increasing the spacing between antenna elements. |
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