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On 02/07/2018 04:49 AM, Gareth's Downstairs Computer wrote:
A question for those who work HF mobile; do you feel that having a loading coil and a short whip materially affects your QSO capability, as the text books suggest, for if not it would seem to suggest that we could all manage with such antennae as our main base air transducers? Hello, and that's difficult to answer as you would have to do a side-by-side comparison of two or more antennas and it gets more complicated if ionospheric propagation is involved with constantly varying receive signal levels. Most mobile HF antennas are electrically short monopoles and as a result look like a capacitor in series with a small "radiation" resistance (the conductive material of the antenna and the vehicle body ground plane also provides some ohmic contribution). The problem is matching the transmitter's RF output impedance (nominally 50 ohms) to the antenna feedpoint. For a longer antenna having a larger radiation resistance we need a lot less inductance in the loading coil and less turns means less RF power dissipation in the coil or any other components comprising the matching network. I'm unsure what you mean by "base air transducer" but keep in mind this discussion is essentially about omni-directional antennas. So a mobile/fixed comparison could be between a vehicular-mounted monopole and, say, a shunt-fed tower or an RF-fed vertical wire supported between two structures (a common antenna used in the U.S. for MW (AM) broadcast stations in the early 20th c. (also aboard ocean liners like Titanic but having rotary spark-gap transmitters). Sincerely, and 73s from N4GGO, -- J. B. Wood e-mail: |
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