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In message , Jeff Liebermann
writes On Mon, 20 Apr 2015 08:14:29 +0100, Ian Jackson wrote: Would you need a power extractor at the top end? The whole copter could simply ride on the RF voltage, ie a bit like a bird perched on a high-voltage power line (assuming that the copter electronics were happy). Even if you had zero-weight power extraction chokes etc, I doubt if it would make much difference Good point. That should work, but I would feel better if the quadcopter were not at RF potential. Because the copter is at the very end of the antenna (a very high impedance point) there is essentially no RF current flow into it. You would need extremely high inductance RF chokes to get any significant RF voltage drop across them. I don't want to find out that it doesn't work when I key the transmitter when the quadcopter is 40 meters in the air. There's also a small chance that some of the wiring in the quadcopter will pickup RF from the antenna independent of the power/antenna wiring, which might cause some havoc. Different problem, where more RF chokes might be needed. I guess I could just fly it around an AM BCB transmitting antenna and see what breaks. The only problem is that the local AM transmitting antennas are surrounded by water. The important thing is that the twin wires comprising the antenna be both at the same RF voltage. They need to well capacitively coupled to each other at the TX end and at the top end. As long as you can ensure that all the parts of the copter and its circuitry are leaping up and down at the same RF voltage, it shouldn't suffer any interference. However.................. -- Ian |
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