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On Fri, 21 Apr 2017 00:28:47 -0400, rickman wrote:
A kayaking friend was asking me about antennas for marine VHF radios. Someone recommended this type of antenna. http://www.amateurradio.bz/2m-70cm_v...e_antenna.html No. The above antenna is tuned for 144 to 148MHz. Marine band transmit is from 156.0 to 157.5Mhz transmit, and 161.975 to 162.6Mhz for AIS and weather. You might be able to retune the Jpole antenna in the above article, but my guess(tm) is that VWSR at the band edges is too high. Another reason you don't see Jpole antennas in marine use is that vertical radiation angle. Jpoles radiate most of their RF at the horizon and above, not down. With fairly low gain, that's not a problem with an antenna on the water line as the boat pitches and rolls. It's a major problem with mast mounted antennas. It would be better if the vertical radiation pattern was roughly symmetrical as in this dual Jpole antenna. It would be interesting to see what a model of this antenna looked like in 4NEC2. I guess my first question is what would this be dual band? Is it because it works over a range from 2 meters to 70 cm? Or is it somehow tuned for both bands at the same time but not a lot in between? Nope. It relys on the 3rd harmonic of 146Mhz being roughly on 440MHz. There's usually a complex matching network on dual band antennas to help keep the VSWR down, but this one apparently lacks even a balun. For example, this is part of the guts of a Diamond X-50 dual band ham antenna (after a friend backed his car into it breaking it in half). http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/antennas/Misc/slides/x50-01.html This antenna would need to be vertically mounted, so would be a little clumsy sticking three foot up from a kayak. Light weight would be better than heavier. The construction plans call for stainless steel material. Any reason to not use aluminum? Aluminum is fine. Anodizing might be a problem. Alodyne 1200 is fine. Most paints are ok. Coat hangers suck. Watch out for dissimilar metals in contact. Is diameter important? Larger outer diameter means wider bandwidth. You can use tubing in order to get light weight. To use aluminum I would want to use something thicker than 1/8 inch and likely hollow. I believe TV antennas are usually made from 1/4 inch tubing with maybe 1/16 inch thick walls. I'm too lazy to measure mine, but I would guess(tm) 0.5" diameter and a very thin 0.031 wall diameter. TV needs all the bandwidth it can get, so fat pipes are needed. The antenna also needs to be light and cheap, so thin wall with seams is standard for TV. I guess that might make it harder to bend without kinking. We used 6061-T6 for antennas. You can bend it in a tight turn if you seal the ends and fill the tubing with sand: http://www.wikihow.com/Bend-Aluminum-Pipe Would it be ok to make it with some sort of couplers for the bends? Sure. The bend does not need to be contiguous. A bar with two holes drilled in it for the two elements should work (and be adjustable). Suggestion: Look at various commercial VHF antennas and build something similar. You'll be amazed at how crude they are inside. One common antenna (I forgot the maker and model) used a fiberglass radome with a length of 1/4" wide copper tape stuck to the inside of the tube for driven elements. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Fri, 21 Apr 2017 18:28:32 +0100, Jeff wrote:
No. The above antenna is tuned for 144 to 148MHz. Marine band transmit is from 156.0 to 157.5Mhz transmit, and 161.975 to 162.6Mhz for AIS and weather. You might be able to retune the Jpole antenna in the above article, but my guess(tm) is that VWSR at the band edges is too high. I think you are misinterpreting what this antenna is. It is not a J-pole. It is basically 2 closely coupled dipoles one on 2m and the other on 70cms. The drawing that looks like a j-pole is one half of the antenna ie an element cut to 2m and the other 70cms. Jeff Oops. Y'er right. It's not a Jpole, although it looks like one. More like a "fan dipole": https://www.google.com/search?q=fan+dipole&tbm=isch The 18.63" is 1/4 wave at 2m and 6.25" is 1/4 wave at 440Mhz. Thanks. Incidentally, I forgot to mumble that one doesn't need two dipoles to operate on just the marine band. Also, I can get similar performance out of an 18" bow tie dipole antenna (and balun), or a biconical porcupine: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/antennas/biconical/index.html -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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