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#2
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Ian, All the points you made are very good especialy when you
stated that gain is ROUGHLY proportional to boom length and then go on to mention "aperture' The question I asked was very specific but not personal like the presidential debates this newsgroup uses the question as the basis for what they want to say. The reason I asked the specific question was to obtain a datum line for antennas relative to gain and a well used term of boom length. NEC programs can provide this basic if the latest revision is used and the program is all encombassing.( Many are not) Mention coupling and some experts go nuts but NEC is all encompassing provides definitive answers that remove measurement errors presently shown and cuts through a lot of garbage. All encompassing is all important in that sufficient segments are available together with the use of variuable dimensions as this gets away from use of methods to get around inadequacy of a particular program. You mention "aperture" but I don.t believe it changes any results given by NEC. Others ridicule the use of the term critical coupling yet NEC shows that element currents can be changed via coupling and it is current placement that we are interested in, so why so much redicule/ The same goes for element diameters NEC provides the correct construction for elements which is another important variable for gain So in other words, a NEC curve would deflect most arguments and personal agenders from the beginning and if one supplies actual measurement that are contrary to those of NEC then we have a basis for truly specific debate. As somebody pointed out, one slanging match has been going on for more than eight years regarding the use of critical coupling, another is the subject of coils, actual measurement versus a manipulated program calculation. I pretty much have had it with excuses regarding inadequecies of some programs, If NEC is a really viable tool; then let us use it as a datum by using a NEC program that is all encompassing to judge measured claims against so hat true specific can be judged. It is possible after all that even NEC may obtain several more revisions over time because of actual measurement which can only aid all in the understanding of antennas and the removal of old wifes tales and private agendas that evolved prior to NEC. Is it auguments that we yearn for on this newsgroup or true resolution of ideas? Art "Ian White, G3SEK" wrote in message ... wrote: I did not want to choose a curve that matches my modelling which you can when presented with three different curves all of which are formulated at different times by different people. I would have thought that the advent of NEC would render these curves redundant ! The plot of many individual yagis does confirm the general idea of gain being roughly proportional to boom length, and that is a very important thing to understand. clip |
#3
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![]() " wrote in message news:t4bdd.277152$D%.236528@attbi_s51... Ian, All the points you made are very good especialy when you stated that gain is ROUGHLY proportional to boom length and then go on to mention "aperture' The question I asked was very specific but not personal like the presidential debates this newsgroup uses the question as the basis for what they want to say. The reason I asked the specific question was to obtain a datum line for antennas relative to gain and a well used term of boom length. NEC programs can provide this basic if the latest revision is used and the program is all encombassing.( Many are not) Mention coupling and some experts go nuts but NEC is all encompassing provides definitive answers that remove measurement errors presently shown and cuts through a lot of garbage. All encompassing is all important in that sufficient segments are available together with the use of variuable dimensions as this gets away from use of methods to get around inadequacy of a particular program. You mention "aperture" but I don.t believe it changes any results given by NEC. Others ridicule the use of the term critical coupling yet NEC shows that element currents can be changed via coupling and it is current placement that we are interested in, so why so much redicule/ The same goes for element diameters NEC provides the correct construction for elements which is another important variable for gain So in other words, a NEC curve would deflect most arguments and personal agenders from the beginning and if one supplies actual measurement that are contrary to those of NEC then we have a basis for truly specific debate. As somebody pointed out, one slanging match has been going on for more than eight years regarding the use of critical coupling, another is the subject of coils, actual measurement versus a manipulated program calculation. I pretty much have had it with excuses regarding inadequecies of some programs, If NEC is a really viable tool; then let us use it as a datum by using a NEC program that is all encompassing to judge measured claims against so hat true specific can be judged. It is possible after all that even NEC may obtain several more revisions over time because of actual measurement which can only aid all in the understanding of antennas and the removal of old wifes tales and private agendas that evolved prior to NEC. Is it auguments that we yearn for on this newsgroup or true resolution of ideas? Art "Ian White, G3SEK" wrote in message ... wrote: I did not want to choose a curve that matches my modelling which you can when presented with three different curves all of which are formulated at different times by different people. I would have thought that the advent of NEC would render these curves redundant ! The plot of many individual yagis does confirm the general idea of gain being roughly proportional to boom length, and that is a very important thing to understand. clip There is no direct connection between boom length and gain. This is because lengthing the boom also implies one has added elements and possibly made adjustments to element spacing. A good source of the data you seek may be an antenna catalog(or manufacturers web site). compare the published gains of the different length antennas. |
#4
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Jimmie wrote:
The plot of many individual yagis does confirm the general idea of gain being roughly proportional to boom length, and that is a very important thing to understand. clip There is no direct connection between boom length and gain. This is because lengthing the boom also implies one has added elements and possibly made adjustments to element spacing. Sorry, I should have said that boom length is roughly proportional to the *available* gain, if the whole length of the boom is populated with elements in such a manner as to optimize the gain. That requirement is usually taken as understood. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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