Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old November 20th 04, 02:46 AM
Fred
 
Posts: n/a
Default random wire antenna

Hi all,
I installed a random wire antenna of about 80 ft. Inside the shack I
would like to run coax to the outside and connect it to the wire. The
question is now what kind of matching transformer (UNUN) do I need to
get a good match.
Thanks for any answers.

Fred
wb6iiq
  #4   Report Post  
Old November 20th 04, 04:13 PM
Jesus
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hello:

Transceiver---- coax 50 ohms ------ balum 9:1 ------- randon wire of 42
meters long

It is an efective antenna to 3,5 to 50 Mhz.

Transceiver----- Match --------- coax 50 ohms ---------- balum 9:1 -------
random wire.

Bye.

Jesus.

"Fred" escribió en el mensaje
om...
Hi all,
I installed a random wire antenna of about 80 ft. Inside the shack I
would like to run coax to the outside and connect it to the wire. The
question is now what kind of matching transformer (UNUN) do I need to
get a good match.
Thanks for any answers.

Fred
wb6iiq



  #5   Report Post  
Old November 20th 04, 07:54 PM
Reg Edwards
 
Posts: n/a
Default


I accidentally found your discussion. Having nothing else better to do I
thought I would make the following remarks -

The 9:1 balun on a 'long wire', on the average, has no effect on what you
call the antenna 'effectiveness'. On receive, you may find the signal
strength marginally better at some random frequencies and marginally worse
at other random frequencies.

4:1 baluns have a similar negligible effect at different sets of random
frequencies with a very slightly smaller overall loss over the whole wide
band from MF to HF.

You may just as well omit a balun altogether. Omission of a balun means zero
balun loss. But loss in a balun is negligible anyway. It just means there is
nothing to be gained by fitting one.

Baluns can be useful in particular frequency bands. But if you are
interested in particular bands then a very simple tuned antenna, a coil or
capacitor, or changing antenna length, is much to be preferred.

Baluns in a receiving application are beneficial only to the bank-balances
of balun manufacturers and salesmen. In other words, don't waste you
hard-earned money!

(PS: The supposed 600-ohm Zo of a random length of wire has very little to
do with it. Concentrate on the exact particular antenna length. Please send
me the money you save.)

And forgive me for the interruption.
----
Reg , G4FGQ




  #6   Report Post  
Old November 20th 04, 09:28 PM
Reg Edwards
 
Posts: n/a
Default

The supposed 600-ohm Zo of a random length of wire has very little to
do with it.

===============================

Depending on length, height and wire diameter, Zo can vary between 450 and
650 ohms or thereabouts. What's yours?

Then what balun ratio would the guru's and old wives recommend? And to
confuse even further, receivers can have an input impedance anywhere between
50 and 1000 ohms.

Some tuned receivers have an indeterminate input impedance. Who needs a
balun?
----
Reg , G4FGQ


  #7   Report Post  
Old November 20th 04, 10:07 PM
Howard
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 21:28:54 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote:

The supposed 600-ohm Zo of a random length of wire has very little to
do with it.

===============================

Depending on length, height and wire diameter, Zo can vary between 450 and
650 ohms or thereabouts. What's yours?

Then what balun ratio would the guru's and old wives recommend? And to
confuse even further, receivers can have an input impedance anywhere between
50 and 1000 ohms.

Some tuned receivers have an indeterminate input impedance. Who needs a
balun?
----
Reg , G4FGQ

Well Reg need and want are two different things. Perhaps my inverted
L didn't 'need' a balun, however after installing an ICE-182A
DC-Isolated matching transformer (balun if you will) I had a
noticeable reduction in noise. The difference is real and as a result
I have a better S/N ratio that makes listening less fatiguing. Now
here's the $64,000 question ........"Was the difference due to
impedance matching, the DC isolation or did a previously un-noticed
loose ground get fixed when I put the ICE unit in-line?"

Howard
  #8   Report Post  
Old November 20th 04, 10:54 PM
Jack Painter
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Howard" wrote
"Reg Edwards" wrote:

The supposed 600-ohm Zo of a random length of wire has very little to
do with it.

===============================

Depending on length, height and wire diameter, Zo can vary between 450

and
650 ohms or thereabouts. What's yours?

Then what balun ratio would the guru's and old wives recommend? And to
confuse even further, receivers can have an input impedance anywhere

between
50 and 1000 ohms.

Some tuned receivers have an indeterminate input impedance. Who needs a
balun?
----
Reg , G4FGQ

Well Reg need and want are two different things. Perhaps my inverted
L didn't 'need' a balun, however after installing an ICE-182A
DC-Isolated matching transformer (balun if you will) I had a
noticeable reduction in noise. The difference is real and as a result
I have a better S/N ratio that makes listening less fatiguing. Now
here's the $64,000 question ........"Was the difference due to
impedance matching, the DC isolation or did a previously un-noticed
loose ground get fixed when I put the ICE unit in-line?"

Howard


You know Howard, it's mostly amateur radio operators who have read too much
and worked too little that make statements like "a balun for receiving is
just for the balun makers benefit". These hams have little idea how
hobbyists who have special interest in DX, especially utility, and have
tried and tested numerous receiver antenna systems over the years. As I said
earlier I too use ICE equipment on one receive-only antenna. I could care
less what a stuffed-shirt thinks that does for my receive ability, as I used
it first as a hobbyist and then professionally. It certainly does improves
my digital and analog signal reception. I have that Ice box impedance set to
favor the lower bands on the wire and it at times outperforms a matched
dipole in reception. The compromise is that I lose usefulness of that wire
much above 6 mhz,which is ok as it does it required job superfluously. Now
the 4:1 current-type balun use on another wire-set antenna provides quiet
listening as well as excellent transmit abilities from 2182 Khz through
11000 Khz. And of course I use a 1:1 current-balun on a long dipole. Would I
"have" to? Of course not. Does it improve the antennas abilities in
listening as well as transmit? You bet it does. Do what works for you and
God help anyone who argues with that.

Jack Painter
Virginia Beach VA


  #9   Report Post  
Old November 21st 04, 04:17 AM
Dave VanHorn
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Decoupling reduces the noise (rf current) traveling on the shield of the
coax, both to, and from your shack, which would otherwise get pretty much
direct coupled to your antenna.


  #10   Report Post  
Old November 21st 04, 12:59 PM
J.Hoekstra
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hello,
you should try the Magnetic Line Balun (MLB).
It is a ferrite (not powderiron) core with a 9to1 ratio.
Take three wires, twist them and turn them around a ferritering.
Set them in series.
The lower winding to the (t)rx het high to the wire.
It simply works fine on the receiver and with a trx with a tuner.

"Dave VanHorn" schreef in bericht
...

Decoupling reduces the noise (rf current) traveling on the shield of the
coax, both to, and from your shack, which would otherwise get pretty much
direct coupled to your antenna.




Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. Serge Stroobandt, ON4BAA Antenna 8 February 24th 11 10:22 PM
Putting a Ferrite Rod at the Far-End of a Random Wire Antenna ? RHF Antenna 25 November 15th 04 08:15 PM
Random length wire antenna Fred Antenna 4 August 17th 04 04:42 PM
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? lbbs Antenna 16 December 13th 03 03:01 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:05 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017