Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Cecil,
I decided to take a look at the question you asked below, and I came up with a really simple modeling experiment. Set up a simple quarter-wave vertical in EZNEC, resonant at 7 MHz. Run the source and current functions and save the data. Now change the frequency to 3.5 MHz and repeat the source and current functions. Do not scale the antenna or change anything else. I believe most people would now view this antenna as one-eighth wave at the new frequency, or perhaps representative of a whip above a loading coil (at 3.5 MHz). This experiment demonstrates what happens to the "remaining eight feet" when confronted with the conflict between the "need" for 90 degrees and the availability of only 45 degrees. My computer did not blow up, and I suspect yours will survive as well. Any number of permutations can be tried. Change the length instead of the frequency, scale up, scale down, and so on. The current always starts at 1.0, and it always goes to 0.0 at the tip. The reactance and driving voltage can be awesome, but the current remained unfazed (or is that unphased?). This is not a revelation. Antenna books point out that the current in a short antenna decreases in a straight line, not a sine curve, from the feed point to the tip. (E.g. Kraus, 2nd Ed. page 216) Since your traveling wave model seems to be based on a 90 degree requirement, you may want to consider incorporating this additional information before submitting your new model for publication. 73, Gene W4SZ (The "eight feet" is taken from your message. In this experiment the whip length is quite a bit larger, of course. Rescale the entire experiment if you like.) Cecil Moore wrote: Here's an unanswered question: If the loading coil occupies zero degrees, how can the remaining eight feet of the antenna occupy the entire 90 electrical degrees? Wouldn't the coil have to change the frequency for that to happen? |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Current in antenna loading coils controversy | Antenna |