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Old February 1st 05, 01:47 AM
Roy Lewallen
 
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Richard Clark wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2005 15:14:49 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote:


As a competent and experienced engineer, it should then be simple for
you to answer the following:

What is the gain difference, in dB, between a dipole resonant at 97.5
MHz (the geometric center of the FM band) which is 1 mm diameter and one
which is 1 cm diameter? Feel free to assume that the conductor is
perfect, or use copper if you prefer.

Also feel free to calculate the antenna Q and "antenna potential",
although the question here is about gain.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Richard Harrison wrote:

Roy, W7EL wrote:
"That`s interesting.(I don`t know why you want fat. It will give you
lower gain.) How much lower? Why?"

It`s a fact. Fat antennas have more bandwidth, and that is inversely
proportional to Q. Teducing antenna Q, by fattening the antenna, reduces
the antenna potential by about the same factor.

Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI




Hi Roy,

What an unusual demand to throw in the face of someone who agrees with
you: no difference in gain. Richard's quote is merely your ironic
question to Buck's quote (already discounted by Buck).

However, for Brad's interest (and conforming to his original design,
not of 1cM but more like 170mm diamter) the Q for the fatter dipole is
indeed much less (in fact it covers the entire FM band into a 50 Ohm
load between 2:1 VSWR points) where the thin dipole (1mm) is something
less than 6MHz. Bandwidth (and inferentially Q) differential 4:1
which would translate the input V to the tips to something less (at
the same proportion) than that experienced with the thin dipole (which
for a recieve antenna is a strange characteristic to focus upon).

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


If you were agreeing with me, Richard (Harrison), I apologize. It wasn't
apparent to me with my poor language skills. Thanks to Richard (Clark)
for effectively applying his superior parsing skills to the problem.

There are only two ways to change the free space gain of an antenna --
change the efficiency, or change the pattern. Those are all the choices
you've got. A fat antenna is certainly no less efficient than a skinny
one -- in fact, it'll be more efficient. But the difference in this case
would be so small as to be unmeasurable. There would be some very slight
change in pattern between a fat antenna and a slim one, but again the
change would be negligibly small.

Considering only free space performance to remove the additional
variable of ground reflection, and assuming that an antenna is
essentially 100% efficient, it's impossible to design an antenna that
has gain in its best direction which is any less than 2.15 dB below that
of a half wave dipole. The lowest possible gain of any efficent antenna
is the isotropic, at 0 dBi.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


 
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