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On 10/21/2015 4:42 AM, Brian Howie wrote:
In message , rickman writes The capacitance of the loop to the screen meant that at the minimum variable C setting ,I couldn't get the maximum frequency of about 500KHz I wanted, so I had to take turns off. I now need more parallel C to tune the look down to 136KHz. Wow, that loop must have a *lot* of capacitance. Is there a way to space the conductors away from the copper tubing in the run? Not easy I'm curious why you would use copper pipe for the shield. Because it provides both shield and support? I guess there are a million ways to build a shielded loop. I like the idea of using coax, but I don't know if that also has serious limitations from the capacitance between loop conductor and shield. It seemed a good idea at the time. The original design used plastic pipe covered with tin-foil ,but I wanted something that would survive a Scottish winter outdoors. PVC 4-7 Loop Antenna Al Burzynski KA5JGV ( it's on the NDB yahoo group) it used 12 turns. I think the use of plastic pipe and external tinfoil reduces the C. My loop does work quite well, and has survived outdoors but I think it could be improved Yes, well, they can *all* be improved. I find it interesting to make stuff like this from discarded materials like rain gutter. I'm trying to understand why one poster in a yahoo group says thin stock is no good for transmitting loop antennas. The skin effect limits the signal to the outer few mils of copper or aluminum. I think thin stock will do just fine if the circumference is large, overcoming the limitations of the skin effect. At least you are using all the material rather than just the outer few mils. -- Rick |
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