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Gidday Johann
Simple balun you can use in this case is a "choke" balun. Just wind about 5 turns of the coax in a 100-150mm circle near the antenna feedpoint and tape it up. This will almost eliminate all of the line radiation. Another way is to make a folded dipole. This has a nominal 300 ohms input impedence and feeding this with a 4:1 coaxial balun (200 ohms) is only a slight mismatch. (1.5:1 VSWR) I have also heard (but never checked/proven) that a folded dipole antenna couples to "space" better than a simple dipole. (ie is more efficient) If you cant find an internet refernce to the above then pls ask for more info. Cheers Bob VK2YQA Johann Höchtl wrote: Hal Rosser wrote: You'll find a simple dipole may be your best choice for starting out. Most important of all is to get the antenna up high and use vertical orientation. If I recall, each leg of the dipole should be around 102 inches. 102 inches, or 2.59 m for a metric man like me. That's right. But i bother how i can go from balanced to unbalanced. I use rg58 wire and i do not want to radio interfere my neighbours nor let my radio go up in smoke. So i guess i need a balun. The impedance at the connector from antenna to wire should already be more or less 50 ohms, but it's balanced. What would make an easy though effective 1:1 balun? |
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