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John wrote:
Many thanks for your time Gents, The antennas were intended for outdoor use and constant handling. being encased in hard plastic obviously enhances those functions. My experience has been at the other end of the spectrum so to speak and I (incorrectly) assumed an antenna picks up an electrical signal. Putting a layer of insulating plastic on it seemed contradictory. If antenna is detecting magnetic signals obviously a different story. When I mentioned impedance I mislead you. Wasnt referring to antenna impedance but the impedance looking back form the recieving antenna to the signal source ( thats what us old analogue designers do, Norton/Thevenin equivalent circuits etc !!!!) and the effect on that a layer of plastic has. Your combined efforts have answered a lot of my questions, thanks for your time. Unfortunately the clueless idiot from Poland has woken up and is making his outdated claims again... What you should know is (and apparently have realized by now) that the antenna impedance is not an impedance between its elements and the surrounding air, but a "radiation impedance" that results from the antenna emitting an electromagnetic field. This field traverses plastic, a vacuum, air etc without problem so it does not matter if you coat the elements. |
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