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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Feb 2014 13:27:15 -0800, "Sal" salmonella@food poisoning.org wrote: I had a question about his j-pole analysis. snip I agree with the author (Terry Graves K7FE). snip However, a J-pole (or Zepp) is not a 1/2 wave antenna. The driven element is a 1/4 wavelength long, and therefore DOES require a ground plane. This article covers the point (and more): http://www.w8ji.com/end-fed_vertical_j-pole_and_horizontal_zepp.htm Quoting: Summary End-feds Without Grounds ANY END-FED ANTENNA REQUIRES A LARGE GROUNDPLANE OR OTHER EXTRAORDINARY ISOLATION METHOD OR METHODS TO PREVENT FEEDLINE OR MAST COMMON MODE CURRENTS! Hi, Jeff, I can agree with the need for preventing feedline radiation but one thing you and Terry say may be erroneous. I believe the radiating element of a J-pole to be a half wavelength long, not a quarter-wave. I looked at Terry's EZNEC wires list and observed the long side (the radiator or driven element) of the J is 57 inches and the short side (the stub) is 19 inches. (These dimensions agree with my idea of a 2m J-pole. I've made a few.) As I understand the action of the J-pole, net radiation is low or nil from currents in the lower third of the antenna (bottom third of the radiator and the adjacent stub). The desired radiation comes from the top two-thirds (38 inches) of the radiator, which is very nearly a half wave at 2m. Allowing for so-called "end effect," it's almost exactly cut to 146 MHz. Please check my reasoning and math Your comments are welcome. Thanks. 73, "Sal" (KD6VKW) |
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