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On 8/6/2015 9:48 AM, John S wrote:
On 8/5/2015 10:28 AM, rickman wrote: On 8/5/2015 9:47 AM, John S wrote: On 8/4/2015 11:31 AM, rickman wrote: On 8/4/2015 11:39 AM, John S wrote: The balun thread has become long (138 posts). I propose that we not discuss baluns, but concentrate on antenna balance and coax attachment. Starting from the simplest of all situations, assume a dipole with an RF generator in the middle. If we can't agree that this is a balanced system, then we have nothing left to discuss. Connect an additional wire to one side of the source so that you have one wire on one side and two wires on the other side. Is it still balanced? Is *what* still balanced? The antenna hasn't changed and is still balanced. Well, the starting point is this: ----------0----------- Where the 0 is the generator. Then we attach a wire like so: ----------0.---------- | | | | | I don't understand how the antenna has not changed. The generator hasn't changed and is still balanced. I do not understand how a two-terminal generator can be described as either balanced or unbalanced. But you have added a wire which will load the generator and serve as an element of the antenna changing the radiation pattern. How significantly the pattern will change depends on the orientation of the wire and what it connects to, if anything. There is also the issue of how much energy is transmitted along the wire to whatever is connected to it. Please disregard the radiation pattern in this thread. If you consider the wire to be part of the antenna, then the antenna has changed. In what way could the wire not be part of the antenna? By your construction. You said you have an antenna and a wire. If you meant for the wire to be part of the antenna you would have said that in your OP. So what is your question? You will find that in my OP. The question mark identifies it. "Is it still balanced?" I asked before, what is "it"? You also said, "I do not understand how a two-terminal generator can be described as either balanced or unbalanced." A two terminal generator may have series resistance, for example. That series resistance may not be evenly distributed. More resistance on one leg than the other and it is no longer balanced. If the series resistance is zero, then it would need a *lot* more of it on one leg than the other. ![]() -- Rick |
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