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On Thu, 20 Feb 2014 20:38:22 -0800, "Sal" salmonella@food
poisoning.org wrote: "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message .. . I'm not sure of the frequency of your J-pole. The inductance of about 6 cm of #12AWG solid wire is about 0.05 uH. http://www.consultrsr.com/resources/eis/induct5.htm To resonate at 146Mhz, that would be about 24 pF. 50 Mhz would be about 200 pf. That's enlightening. One must suffer before enlightenment. I need to admit that no such science was applied. I just tried small caps from my stash to see what would happen. When something good happened, I remembered it for next time. Well, I was a bit more scientific when I tried it about 10 years ago in an effort to improve the "American Legion" J-pole. This is from my memory, which is notoriously unreliable. I had the help of a return loss bridge, sweep generator, and oscilloscope. https://www.google.com/search?q=return+loss+bridge&tbm=isch I could tweak the antenna, and see the results to the VSWR immediately. I was finding that the J-pole has a rather narrow operating frequency range and I wanted to know if something could be done about it. Mounting the connector on the base resulted in the narrowest usable bandwidth (at VSWR = 2:1) but also the lowest VSWR. Using the more conventional feed points furthur up from the base, the minimum VSWR was horrid, but the bandwidth was wider. Inserting a series trimmer or wrapping the insulated wire around the 1/4 wave rod reduced the minimum VSWR, but narrowed the bandwidth slightly. Replacing the 1/4" dia aluminum rods, with 3/4" copper water pipe increased the usable bandwidth somewhat, but made the insulated wire wrap capacitor very small and critical. This may sound very scientific, but in reality, it was all done in about an hour, with no photos or recorded data. I had to return the equipment that afternoon. About a year ago, the local radio club had a beginners session on building "emergency antennas", which means a VHF Slim Jim and J-pole type antennas made from 300 ohm twinlead. The only test equipment available was an HT and VSWR bridge. I predicted problems and was invited not to show up. I did anyway, near the end. The problem was that the antennas were VERY sensitive to their surroundings. It was very difficult to cut one to length for minimum VSWR, while people and metal objects moved around the room. The j-pole that seems to benefit most is the 2m version, which I've built the most of. Perhaps we're not dealing with just the inductance of that 6 cm of wire. There could be some residual inductance in the rest of the antenna which is being brought to resonance. Maybe when my element lengths are not optimal, some inductance would be found there. Not sure why the residual reactance would always be inductive. The first time I add a cap and it gets worse, then I'll know it isn't so. Dunno. I can throw together a 4NEC2 model of a j-pole and see what might be the feed point impedance for various styles and locations. No time for that for a few days. Maybe I should experiment with varying the spacing across the stub and see what that does, with and without a cap. It's more fun to fire up the 4NEC2 optimizer, and see what it comes up with for the best possible antenna given a collection of restraints. Yet another project... -- 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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