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#1
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Richard Clark wrote in message . ..
As for "double dipping" none of your posts to date have any facts to test your complaint. If we are to assume these two dips occur within the same band, that is actually to your benefit as it could only enlarge the matching prospects. However, your paucity of details leaves this as speculation on both sides. If the two dips occur within and without the band, then you have offered nothing to distinguish this from the natural order of things. Simply put, ALL dipoles have many dips throughout the spectrum. In this regard there is nothing special about your "double resonance." Double dips (or even triple and more) certainly at harmonics of the fundamental, certainly. 88.1 and 92 aren't exactly harmonically related! As for the disparaging comment of "maximum return loss suffers," that too is in conflict with expectation. There is nothing inherently sufferable about having more than your share of "dips." Additional resonances does not detract from any other resonance's capacity to perform within its region of match. A second resonance doesn't necessarily rob another and it could be argued that it is actually a boon if you wish to enlarge the bandwidth of an antenna (which by your only specification of 88-108 would be a positive feature). A broadband antenna usually doesn't have as good a match as a dedicated antenna. This is why when i had two dips, the min. SWR was NOT as good as when i had only one resonant (not incuding harmonics) freq. Now, as to HOW you could achieve TWO SWR dips within the FM broadcast band with a "garden variety dipole," then that is revealed by your comments about not needing (and by inference not having) your driveline choked. Simply put, it sounds distinctly like your transmission line length (combined with velocity factor) added a resonant circuit in parallel with the dipole to offer this second dip. You munged things around with the antenna, but changed lines and the second dip went away (as a function of a different line length, or its becoming balanced or choked). You would have to have stumbled onto an unique antenna design to have forced these two dips into this FM band and this is negated by your own description of a "garden variety dipole." On the other hand, transmission line common modality is as common as rain in Seattle. Again, didn't need a choke for this one. Someone infered the first problem, not high above off the ground. Anyone else? S. |
#2
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#3
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Richard Clark wrote in message . ..
A broadband antenna usually doesn't have as good a match as a dedicated antenna. You have too little exposure to the world of antennas to paint them with that broad brush. A simple example is a discone antenna which is a variant of the biconical antenna, which is the genesis of ALL dipoles. Either the discone or the biconical display a very wide bandwidth (octaves) and are eminently matchable by definition. I'll bet you money that a well designed, dedicated, tunable antenna can achieve a better SWR than any discone. There are broadband folded dipoles for VHF, but you don't get something for nothing! They may be adequate across the band, but nothing beats a dedicated antenna. Again, didn't need a choke for this one. You have yet to show that it is not your problem, much less the lack of need (which is a strict requirement for tuning). "Not needing" it can be accomplished through one of two means: Luck, or a hardwired solution (the customer, like with CB whips, cannot vary the length without causing a major shift in dynamics). Either way, the two are probably the same solution, an even halfwave multiple length line. The longer the line, the more tenuous the solution. Neither. We have varied the coax length, certainly not keeping to multiples of 1/2 wavelength, with results remaining the same. We just don't need it with our design. Someone infered the first problem, not high above off the ground. So what was the second thing i did? S. |
#4
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Dr. Slick wrote:
There are broadband folded dipoles for VHF, but you don't get something for nothing! They may be adequate across the band, but nothing beats a dedicated antenna. Here's something for virtually nothing. Take a commercial FM folded dipole, vary the feedline length, and you have a tunable folded dipole peaking at your frequency of choice. The tuning can be done by mounting two telescoping antenna sections side-by-side. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
#5
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#6
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Richard Clark wrote in message . ..
On 12 Nov 2004 06:07:50 -0800, (Dr. Slick) wrote: I'll bet you money that a well designed, dedicated, tunable antenna can achieve a better SWR than any discone. I don't want your money (nor your ganja). Time and tide won't wait for you to offer an example either. :-) Don't take my word for it...go measure and compare for yourself... S. |
#8
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Richard Clark wrote in message . ..
On 12 Nov 2004 12:16:27 -0800, (Dr. Slick) wrote: Don't take my word for it Never entered my mind to do that. ...go measure and compare for yourself... Been there, done that. Time and tide are not still for the expectation of ganja-man's example. :-) Like i said, i'm willing to bet money. But your stubborness and inability to receive new information has kept you ignorant this long, so why should you ever change? Stay the way you are and always have been... Slick |
#9
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Dr. Slick wrote:
"They (terminated folded dipoles) may be adequate across the band, but nothing beats a dedicated antenna." A rhombic will clean your clock. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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