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Roy Lewallen wrote:
I'll accept your prediction. It doesn't seem to correlate with your disagreement with Ian that the current into and out of a lumped inductor are equal. You accused him of "mental masterbation" and being "seduced by the steady state model" for even thinking such thoughts. Yes, for center-loaded electrical 1/4WL mobile antennas, that is true. You seem to be protecting the same sacred cow as Ian. For the sixth time: If a loading coil is located at a current maximum or current minimum point, the current into and out of the coil will be approximately the same. If a loading coil is located where the slope of the current is positive, the current will actually increase through the coil. If a loading coil is located where the slope of the current is negative, the current will decrease through the coil. This is typical of center- loaded mobile HF antennas. Conventional circuit theory predicts equal currents going in and out, so from your response I had presumed that the fancier analysis would predict something else. Not if the coil is located at a current maximum or current minimum point. How many times do I have to say that before it soaks in? You've also stated that the current shift through the inductor should equal the "electrical length" of the antenna "replaced" by the inductor. In this case, the inductor is "electrically lengthening" the antenna by either about 45 degrees, or about half that amount, depending on how you assign the effect of the mounting arrangement. Nope, it isn't. You antenna is somehow already loaded and is equivalent to a 50 foot unloaded antenna. Your feedpoint reactance should be around +j370 for an unloaded antenna so you have about 27 degrees of extraneous loading somewhere. So in the past, you've predicted no difference, something like 20 or 45 degrees phase shift, or an indeterminate amount. It's good to see you've settled on one figure. There are three possibilities listed earlier. What happens with a coil depends upon where it is located. Please read that over and over until it soaks in. My inductor was placed at the antenna base because I could measure the currents there with reasonable accuracy. Yep, you are looking for your keys under the streetlight because the light is better there than it is where you really lost the keys. On his web site, Yuri quoted W9UCW as measuring the currents at the ends of a toroid mounted at the base of the antenna as being 100 mA at the bottom and 79 at the top. You must, then, believe these measurements to be in error. If the toroid is not mounted at a current maximum point, i.e. if the feedpoint impedance is slightly capacitive, then those figures could be accurate. I didn't pay any attention to them. Could be his coil causes a larger phase shift than your coil. You making your antenna too long ensured that the current maximum point would fall inside the coil. Whether you realize it or not, you are biasing the outcome of your experiment to agree with your pre-conceived (sacred cow) notions. Please note that I am not defending everything Yuri and W9UCW have said so don't treat that set of three people as a lumped constant. I am not guilty by association. My postings stand on their own merits or lack thereof. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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