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"Joel Kolstad" wrote: I took a look at the antenna you're describing... "RHF" wrote in message om... * Any 'theory' behind why this Idea might Work ? My thought would be that, at MW frequencies, the 'wire' part of the antenna is pretty much 'lumped' (no significant phase change along its length), so you have a standard ferrite rod antenna that you're hooking up via a long piece of hookup wire. That's a reasonable enough antenna. As you approach HF, the 'wire' part of the antenna starts to become active and the two signals combine. Still, this is very much a 'hands waving' explanation; hopefully someone else will have a more solid response. * Does this Idea actually Work ? * Or is this Idea just so much Antenna 'hype' and Sales Marketing I imagine it works as well as either antenna alone (the ferrite rods or the long wire) would, and the real question is... do the two together produce any significant additional gain? I suspect not (much), but even if so, sometimes a wideband standard gain antenna is more desirable than a higher gain single bander. Work is not a very well defined word. The antenna will work in that it will pick up some signal and deliver it to the radio. I think you mean to ask how well compared to another antenna. I pretty much agree with what Joel wrote but add the following explanation. Any time you add some type of coil to a wire you are electrically increasing the electrical length over the physical length of the wire. The coil on the end will cause the wire part of the antenna to resonate at a lower frequency. This is generally not a good or effective way to make a sensitive antenna but it will "work." Generally a wire antenna will pick up a significant amount of signal energy at frequencies above its electrical length and perform much worse below its resonate frequency so basically this looks like a attempt to get a rather short piece of wire (16 feet) to "work" down to a frequency far below its resonant physical length. The BALAN coil depending on design could be a good thing in that it will cause the high impedance of the wire to be closer on average to the impedance of the coax cable part of the antenna and the radios input. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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