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On Thu, 4 Jul 2013 00:33:18 +0100, Channel Jumper
wrote: You cannot use a tuner with a tuner. Nope. I've done that for fun. I just happen to have two identical MFJ tuners available and thought it might be amusing to put them back to back and measure the losses at the 50 ohm output. One tuner was set to be capacitive, while the other was matched to have the conjugate inductive reactance. It worked nicely until I tried 80 meters, where I heard some internal arcing. Measured losses were fairly high on 40 and 75 meters. If the matching network is the ladder line and you connect a tuner to it - yes you can trick the transceiver into believing that is is seeing a 50 ohm matched load - but all you are going to create is heat. Baloney. The losses come from the limited Q and high resistive losses of the inductors used in the antenna tuner. That's why really good antenna tuners use big fat silver plated coils. Try it yourself with this Java app: http://www.rsq-info.net/PSK-modelling.html You'll start to see substantial losses on 80 meters with the default values. The example uses Q=100 for the inductor, which might be a bit optimistic for 80 meters. (I haven't done a tuner in 30 years so I forget the typical Q values). If you plug in real values extracted from your favorite MFJ antenna tuner, you'll see losses at higher frequencies. On the other side of the coin, I hear all the time - I can work everything that I can hear - with my G5RV - the problem is - what can you hear? Unless you have a real 80 meter dipole and you compare them side by side - within one hour of each other, at the same height and in the same neighborhood - you cannot compare the two. In the end - you will realize that the efficiency is so low - you are not hearing much - just the strongest of signals - when the band is open, and not much of anything when the bands are no cooperating. Sigh. In the 1970's, I did some work with diversity reception on HF. In order for diversity to work, the reception between the two antennas needed to be different presumably via a different skywave path. The tests were on WWV at 2.5, 5.0, 10.0, and 15.0Mhz with a simple dipole and balun tuned to 5.0Mhz. We started with the antennas on opposite sides of the parking lot. The signal levels tracked each other. I ran 1000ft of RG-58c/u down the roadway and the signal still tracked. I ran another 1000ft down the roadway in the opposite direction, and the signals still tracked. I moved one of the receivers about 10,000 ft away and ran twisted pair audio back to the factory. Finally, with 11,000ft of separation, I was able to see frequency selective fading at HF frequencies suitable for diversity reception. (Incidentally, this was adjacent to SJO airport, which added a political layer to such testing). The real problem with comparing antennas closely located is that they interact with each other. Ideally, I would want to see 2-3 wavelengths separation between antennas to prevent interaction. Well, at 80 meters, that's 500 to 750 ft separation, which is difficult to achieve. For added amusement and confusion, there's the commonly ignored problem of takeoff angle. The usual drawings in the books show a signal bouncing between the ground and the ionosphere several time with the angle of incidence equal to the angle of reflection. We'll it doesn't quite work like that. There was an article in QST last year demonstrating that the signal comes from directly overhead. While DX'er try to optimize the takeoff angle to match the equal angles of incidence and reflection, perhaps it would more interesting to try maximizing the gain straight up? I'll see if I can find the issue and article. How the G5RV fits into the picture is beyond my limited imagination. The thing that tricks people into thinking that they are doing something is the fact that they see 100 watts into the meter and they think that they are modulating all 100 watts - when in fact a single side splatter signal is only fully modulated part of the time - most of the time - we aren't really using more then maybe 15 or 20 watts out of 100. Well, you can set the % modulation to 100% and get 100% modulation. The problem is that it can easily splatter as you describe. 25% of CW power is the recommended maximum. Note that none of this diversion has anything to do with antennas. Only the digital modes and CW - which is the original digital modes - dots and dah's - is 100% fully modulated. Wrong. Percent modulation is the radio of the peak-to-peak voltage at the waveform peaks, divided into the peak-to-peak voltage in the modulation troughs, as shown on an oscilloscope. 100% is very common and easily obtained. Please look at the RF on a scope and see for yourself. http://electriciantraining.tpub.com/14193/css/14193_146.htm That is the reason why we turn down the power when we work digital modes. Nope. The reason we turn down the percent modulation is to reduce splatter, not because the transmitter is somehow inherently unable to produce 100% modulation. Most transceivers do not have a 100% duty cycle - hence if you operate at 100 watts for very long - your transceiver will not take it! Wrong again. The reason for the low percentage of modulation for most digital modes is to keep the occupied bandwidth fairly reasonable. As you approach 100% modulation, the signal starts to become wide and begins to splatter. Beyond 100%, it's really wide and ugly. Here's the math for PSK31: http://www.rsq-info.net/PSK-modelling.html Compare the occupied bandwidth and spurious junk at 25% modulation (Fig 3) with the others showing various anomalies. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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