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On Thu, 02 Sep 2004 03:53:46 GMT, "GW"
wrote: I have a question similar to but different from the one posted a few lines below. How do you determine the quality of an antenna ground at HF on an absolute basis? Not how well have I maximized what Mother Nature gave me at my QTH by adding radials, but how good is my ground compared to other stations' grounds at other locations? I have read about the advantages of seawater, ground conductivity etc as guidelines, but how is overall ground quality (not just soil resistivity) determined objectively if indeed that is possible at all? Hi George, You compare a measured value with the theoretical, the difference is loss. Less loss = better (objective goal expressed subjectively). To state the objective goal objectively, you describe the difference in dB. However, this quickly devolves to a subjective test, because only your contact can appreciate the difference, and too often the difference is less than many other factors of variability (like fading). So, let's put this in objective terms. With a dozen radials down, you could double or quadruple that to achieve 2dB more power out. 2dB on the conventional S-Meter may barely register more than a needle's width change while your signal is otherwise dropping and rising 10dB through a QSO. Go the limit (theoretical of course) of 120 radials and you perhaps achieve 3 to 4 dB or two needle's widths. Another objective test is to measure the resistance and compare it to theoretical. However, take care to observe that theory covers a lot of ground (no pun) principally depending upon the thickness of the radiator. To take a useful and common indicator, that value would be 36 Ohms. If you measured 50 Ohms, the excess 14 Ohms could be thought to be residing in poor connections and the loss of ground. You would then tighten connections and add radials to shield against ground loss. Hence by these actions, resistance would lower, and oddly (that is, in contradiction to misguided expectations) SWR would rise. It is unlikely you will add enough radials to achieve theoretical, but close enough counts in RF, hand grenades, and H-Bombs. It is called the law of diminishing returns (a business concept) where the more you put into the ground is not matched in continued, improved performance. It is the first few that count the most. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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