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Richard Fry wrote:
"Wayne" wrote Dead on explanation. Some have insisted that inefficiencies result from antenna size and not from matching challenges. _______ Kindly note that the radiation efficiency of an antenna _system_ is related to its radiation resistance compared to other resistive losses present in that antenna system. It is possible to perfectly match the impedance at the feedpoint of an antenna system to the impedance of the transmission line connected there. But that antenna system still can have very poor radiation efficiency at that frequency. An example of this is a Z-matched, but electrically short vertical monopole driven against a poor r-f ground connection such as a few buried ground rods. Most of the available transmitter power is dissipated in the r-f ground resistance, rather than being usefully radiated as e-m waves. That is true. But the statement you were responding to was made in response to a specific example where the RF loss resistance was much smaller than the 0.49.ohm radation resistance. And the whole discussion arose from the suggestion that short antennas are *necessarily* inefficient because they cannot radiate without loss. Your example is a good one of a system with a large loss resistance which needs a higher radiation resistance monopole to feed the combination efficiently in series. It is a perfectly good example, but shows nothing about the intriinsic radiation efficiency of a short antenna, just about its practical usefulness in a certain situations. -- Roger Hayter |
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