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#1
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Does a ground plane need a choke? What about being grounded to the mast?
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#2
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I say, I say, I say! Did you hear the one about the ground plane
and the policeman's dog? Perhaps not. wrote in message oups.com... Does a ground plane need a choke? |
#3
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If the engine is already warmed up, no choke is needed.
"Airy R.Bean" wrote in message ... I say, I say, I say! Did you hear the one about the ground plane and the policeman's dog? Perhaps not. wrote in message oups.com... Does a ground plane need a choke? |
#4
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A ground plane or a tuned counterpoise does not. A rule of thumb is that if the
conventional aperture is 1/2 wave across or more, you won't need the choke. Smaller and you will. 73, Chip N1IR |
#6
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No and no. But in other cases, it could be yes and yes.
This should keep you good and confused for a while...:/ MK |
#7
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I cleaned and ground my plane after it struck a nail and
was also choked with sawdust. wrote in message oups.com... No and no. But in other cases, it could be yes and yes. This should keep you good and confused for a while...:/ MK |
#8
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... No and no. But in other cases, it could be yes and yes. This should keep you good and confused for a while...:/ MK And may I suggest that Stryped pick up a copy of ARRL antenna handbook ARRL novice antenna notebook ARRL "hints and kinks for the radio amateur" VHF UHF manual by Jessop KE6LZS Lou |
#9
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A "ground plane" antenna is designed to 'fool" the antenna into thinking the
horizontal radials are actually the surface of the earth. This term actually has nothing to do with grounding the antenna. However, the antenna will work better if the mast of it is grounded, since this gives the radials an actual earth ground reference electrically, and it therefore will work more closely to it's design specs. wrote in message oups.com... Does a ground plane need a choke? What about being grounded to the mast? |
#10
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Zombie Wolf wrote:
A "ground plane" antenna is designed to 'fool" the antenna into thinking the horizontal radials are actually the surface of the earth. This term actually has nothing to do with grounding the antenna. However, the antenna will work better if the mast of it is grounded, since this gives the radials an actual earth ground reference electrically, and it therefore will work more closely to it's design specs. Why would RF currents flowing in the mast make the antenna work better? Wouldn't that be about the same as common-mode transmission line currents? -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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