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Cecil Moore wrote:
As a point of interest, what is the feedpoint impedance of a 2m J-Pole if the short is removed at the bottom and the antenna is fed at that point, aka the original Zepp antenna? Is that like the Arrow Antenna's J-Pole design? Just measured the Arrow Antenna J-Pole and can report that it *is* a Zepp design scaled for 2 meters. Here's the schematic: Center Conductor---------+ 1/4WL + 1/2WL Braid---------+-------------------- The center conductor and braid are usually reversed for a Zepp but that really doesn't make a whole lot of difference. The Arrow Antenna J-pole just uses an open stub instead of a shorted stub like the average J-pole. The 1/4WL open stub transforms the very high feedpoint impedance of the 1/2WL section down to a low feedpoint impedance. The 1/4WL shorted stub of the average J-Pole transforms the impedance from zero ohms at the short to thousands of ohms at the base of the 1/2WL section. Somewhere in between those two values lies the desired value of 50 ohms so the shorted stub has to be tapped. Actually, I think I like the Arrow Antenna version better for homebrewing. The 3/4WL section is bolted to the base plate which is easy. Then an SO-239 can be mounted on the base plate for attaching the coax and a 1/4WL #14 solid wire can attached to the center of the socket and be supported at the top by an insulator attached to the 3/4WL section. The Arrow Antenna version can be mostly aluminum while the ordinary J-Pole, being 100% copper tubing, is relatively hard to solder. -- 73, Cecil, http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
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