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Tuning an AEA Halo on 6m?
I got a AEA halo for 6m and put it up. Worked good but the
low SWR point was 51.000 with a 1mhz 2:1 bandwidth. I wanted to adjust it so I got a 1:1 SWR at 50.500 so I took it down and loosened the loop overlap screws. I then stretched the loop out 2", figuring longer = lower freq. The low SWR point CLIMBED 800 khz!?!?!? WTF? I pulled it back down and made the antenna *shorter* than I started and bingo! It now shows 1:1 SWR at 50.500 mhz yet still shows acceptable SWR on the local 6m repeater's input (51.130). 52.525 is out - SWR too high. :-( Will someone please explain why this antenna seems to defy conventional tuning standards? Ken KG0WX |
Ken- consider that these are a high "Q" device (narrow bandwidth)
and, that they are a tuned loop (the ends of the two rods form a CAPACITOR-- and the plates of a capacitor increase capacitance, the closer they get! The higher the capacitance, the lower the frequency. The antenna , itself , is an inductor, and that INDUCTANCE doesnt change. "Tis that simple-- Jim NN7K Ken Bessler wrote: I got a AEA halo for 6m and put it up. Worked good but the low SWR point was 51.000 with a 1mhz 2:1 bandwidth. I wanted to adjust it so I got a 1:1 SWR at 50.500 so I took it down and loosened the loop overlap screws. I then stretched the loop out 2", figuring longer = lower freq. The low SWR point CLIMBED 800 khz!?!?!? WTF? I pulled it back down and made the antenna *shorter* than I started and bingo! It now shows 1:1 SWR at 50.500 mhz yet still shows acceptable SWR on the local 6m repeater's input (51.130). 52.525 is out - SWR too high. :-( Will someone please explain why this antenna seems to defy conventional tuning standards? Ken KG0WX |
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