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Szczepan Bialek wrote:
"Rob" napisa? w wiadomo?ci ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: "Rob" napisa3 w wiadomo?ci ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: Do you mean the antenna with the two legs where the one leg is connected to the shield of a coax? That is not a correct way to feed a dipole! There must be a balun between the coax and the dipole. The balun only improve the monopole . The only one leg is red (radiate): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Di...ebandbalun.png The color someone used in an illustrative diagram has no significance in the operation of the antenna. Both the halves of the dipole are involved in the radiation. If it is feed by the two wires transmission line: http://www.deltadx.net/ABCDx/Sections/Antennas.htm http://www.deltadx.net/ABCDx/Section...le-Ladder2.gif S* Did you notice there is no connection to ground required? Jimp wrote: "Only end fed monopoles need radials". Marconi wrote that all antennas needs ground. Jimp has read modern literature and is correct while Marconi was wrong. It is obvious that "the antenna with the two legs where the one leg is connected to the shield of a coax" is the Marconi antenna. No, it is not "obvious", it is nonsense to call a dipole a Marconi antenna. A Marconi antenna by definition is an end fed monopole one quarter wavelength high. It is not the dipole antenna. A dipole most certainly IS a dipole. The rest of your antennas (small power) can have the ground from AC supply or chassis. Babbling nonsense. You are an ignorant, ineducable idiot. |
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