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On 6/15/2012 2:23 PM, Boomer wrote:
I have used a 75 meter loop antenna here where I live for the past 5 years. It works very well. I live right in town on a lot surrounded by other homes. I started with a dipole but was advised that a loop would hear less noise. It turned out to be quite true. I am now a convert to the loop antenna. Have no idea of the physics of how it works, but it sure does work well on bands between 75 and 20 meters. It actually seems to work best on 40 meters. It is not true. Only in the cases of corona buildup, etc, on the elements would that be the case. If you hear less noise with the loop, vs the dipole, it's due to the change in pattern. Not due to any qualities of the loop itself. Noise is RF the same as any other signal, and follows all the same rules. It's no different than an actual signal. If what you/they say is true, and the loop received less noise, it would also receive less "desired" signals. Or in other words, everything would be down vs the dipole. The most likely explanation is the change in pattern less favored the direction the noise is coming from. Either that, or the noise is local to your shack, and for some reason the loop's feed line is better decoupled than the one feeding the dipole. If I had to bet, I'd say it's the change in pattern. There are no magical anti noise properties with loops. |
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