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![]() In article . net, Wimpie wrote: Problem exists how to get reliable insulation to split driven element and support rod which is exposed to RF voltage ? Fiberglass is told to be sensitive creating conductive coal brigdes which creates true resistive short at driving point ? (at least one fiberglass tubing is done so... gap was 2 inches ) Assuming power of about 1 kW and a HW dipole (say 60 Ohms), the voltage will be about 350Vp. I can hardly imagine that a plastic gap of 0.05m will degrade to failure because of tracking. On the other hand, if the original poster is attempting to drive this antenna off-resonance, with open-wire feedline and a wide- impedance-range transmatch / "antenna tuner", then it's entirely possible that the feedpoint will sometimes be "looking into" a much higher impedance, and that a matched drive will result in very high voltages at the feedpoint. Even a coax-feed antenna might have this problem, I suppose, if the split element is being driven by something like a delta match which has a relatively high impedance- transformation ratio. From what I see in a short Google-search, fiberglass *can* be hygroscopic, depending on what resin was used to bind the fiberglass. A fiberglass rod which was made with a somewhat-hygroscopic resin (e.g. polyamide) might tend to behave badly in the face of high RF voltages, whereas a rod made with a non-hygroscopic resin might be fine unless dirty or wet. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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