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Use a different length wrench. :-)
================== Or use one made of well-varnished dry wood. |
Richard:
Your sense of humor is greatly enjoyed :) Warmest regards, John -- I would like to point out, I do appreciate the "Been there--done that!" posts. Indeed, now your observations, comments and discourse should be filled with wisdom--I am listening!!! "Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Sun, 10 Apr 2005 08:14:38 -0700, "John Smith" wrote: Hmmmm. The top had does NOT seem to be such a good idea, at least not in combination with the helical coil--with total element length as a helical and evenly spread out. Hi Brett, If it's not a good idea, it's not a bad idea either. A top hat is simply a means to an end - or in terms of good and bad, it makes the best of a poor situation. If I just move a wrench in the yard around the antenna I get wide SWR swings! (OK, maybe that is exaggerating a bit--but you get my meaning.) The top hat seems to give the antenna an almost "magical ability" to couple into any metal object of sufficient size, cars are noteworthy examples!!! You may have a future in Home security and monitoring electronics. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
I am planing on side mounting a 2 meter J-Pole part way up on a tower.
How far from the tower should I mount the antenna? I do plan on making the final adjustment of the feed point with the antenna mounted up a few feet on the tower. The radiation pattern is not a big concern. In fact I would prefer that it favor one quadrant. Thanks for any advice. Ron - K0QVF http://www.southslope.net/~ronton/ |
Ron, K0QVF wrote:
"How far from the tower should I mount the antenna?" Supposing you want the least effect on the pattern and impedance, place the antenna as far as possible from the tower.. Satisfaction is obtained with much closer spacing. The tower is non-resonant. Its reactance will impede induced current from a radiator which is really close by. If there is little induced current there is little re-radiated energy to foul the pattern. The 3rd edition of Kraus` "Antennas" has a graph on page 350 of gain in field intensity versus spacing from a flat reflector. At 0.5 wavelength the gain is 0 dBi. That`s less than the resonant 1/2-wave antenna alone which has about 2.14 dB gain over an isotropic. The graph shows a gain of about 2.14 dBi with a spacing of only 0.1 wavelength spacing. So, anything greater than 0.1 wavelength from the tower should be fine. That`s 20 cm in the 2-meter band, or about 8 inches. More distance means less coupling and should be better. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
The only way to get 0 dBi maximum gain from a lossless antenna is to
have a perfectly circular pattern in all azimuths and elevations. It's not possible to have a maximum gain (that is, gain in the best direction) less than 0 dBi unless loss is present. This is something everyone with a basic understanding of antennas should know. So it seemed to me very unlikely that a dipole spaced a half wavelength from a reflector would have a perfectly circular pattern and, therefore, it must have gain greater than 0 dBi in some direction. I don't have Kraus' third edition (yet), but there's a diagram on p. 546 of the second edition which I suspect is the same as the one Richard is referring to. The caption under the graph clearly says that the gain at 0.5 wavelength is 0 dB *relative to a half wave dipole in free space*, or about 2.15 dBi, not 0 dBi. If the third edition really says that the gain of a half wave antenna spaced 0.5 wavelength from a reflector is 0 dBi, it's an error and should be brought to the editor's attention so it can be corrected. I also believe that while you might draw some possible parallels, you can't directly apply the characteristics of an antenna in proximity to an infinite reflecting plane (as in Kraus) to those of an antenna in proximity to a tower. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Richard Harrison wrote: . . . The 3rd edition of Kraus` "Antennas" has a graph on page 350 of gain in field intensity versus spacing from a flat reflector. At 0.5 wavelength the gain is 0 dBi. That`s less than the resonant 1/2-wave antenna alone which has about 2.14 dB gain over an isotropic. The graph shows a gain of about 2.14 dBi with a spacing of only 0.1 wavelength spacing. So, anything greater than 0.1 wavelength from the tower should be fine. That`s 20 cm in the 2-meter band, or about 8 inches. More distance means less coupling and should be better. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Roy Lewallen wrote:
I also believe that while you might draw some possible parallels, you can't directly apply the characteristics of an antenna in proximity to an infinite reflecting plane (as in Kraus) to those of an antenna in proximity to a tower. Roy is gallantly trying to be non-commercial about this, so someone else had better say it: Download the free demo version of any NEC-based antenna modeling program, and model the effects of the actual tower geometry. It's the only way to see what's really happening. You'll get a good first approximation by modeling the tower as its three very long vertical legs. Since you're only interested in the effects of the tower on the J-pole's omnidirectional pattern, you can use any kind of vertical omni to model the antenna itself - a center-fed dipole for simplicity. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
I agree, although I have joked with Roy, his EZNEC 4.0 is a serious and
"state of the art" application. Although my experience with applications of this nature is limited (I have not examined EVERY one) it is a well designed and thought out work. His efforts are notable... Regards, John "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... The only way to get 0 dBi maximum gain from a lossless antenna is to have a perfectly circular pattern in all azimuths and elevations. It's not possible to have a maximum gain (that is, gain in the best direction) less than 0 dBi unless loss is present. This is something everyone with a basic understanding of antennas should know. So it seemed to me very unlikely that a dipole spaced a half wavelength from a reflector would have a perfectly circular pattern and, therefore, it must have gain greater than 0 dBi in some direction. I don't have Kraus' third edition (yet), but there's a diagram on p. 546 of the second edition which I suspect is the same as the one Richard is referring to. The caption under the graph clearly says that the gain at 0.5 wavelength is 0 dB *relative to a half wave dipole in free space*, or about 2.15 dBi, not 0 dBi. If the third edition really says that the gain of a half wave antenna spaced 0.5 wavelength from a reflector is 0 dBi, it's an error and should be brought to the editor's attention so it can be corrected. I also believe that while you might draw some possible parallels, you can't directly apply the characteristics of an antenna in proximity to an infinite reflecting plane (as in Kraus) to those of an antenna in proximity to a tower. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Richard Harrison wrote: . . . The 3rd edition of Kraus` "Antennas" has a graph on page 350 of gain in field intensity versus spacing from a flat reflector. At 0.5 wavelength the gain is 0 dBi. That`s less than the resonant 1/2-wave antenna alone which has about 2.14 dB gain over an isotropic. The graph shows a gain of about 2.14 dBi with a spacing of only 0.1 wavelength spacing. So, anything greater than 0.1 wavelength from the tower should be fine. That`s 20 cm in the 2-meter band, or about 8 inches. More distance means less coupling and should be better. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Roy Lewallen
, W7EL wrote: "I don`t have Kraus` 3rd edition (yet), but there`s graph on p 546 of thye second edition which I suspect is the same as the one Richard is referring to." I`m sure that`s it. I have Kraus` 1950 edition of "Antennas" and the identical groph is on page 327 in it. If you look at the patterns of a 1/2-wavelength antenna at spacings of 1/4, 1/2, and 1/16 wavelengths spacing from a flat reflector nearby, they are all nearly circular, indicating little distortion in their unblocked direction. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Roy, I looked at the graph and get a different interpretation. Every spacing
except 1/2 wave length spacing shows gain. That being the case the pattern must be distorted for all cases except .5 wavelength. I have Kraus 1950 edition "Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Roy Lewallen , W7EL wrote: "I don`t have Kraus` 3rd edition (yet), but there`s graph on p 546 of thye second edition which I suspect is the same as the one Richard is referring to." I`m sure that`s it. I have Kraus` 1950 edition of "Antennas" and the identical groph is on page 327 in it. If you look at the patterns of a 1/2-wavelength antenna at spacings of 1/4, 1/2, and 1/16 wavelengths spacing from a flat reflector nearby, they are all nearly circular, indicating little distortion in their unblocked direction. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
*Chuckle* Yes, they're nearly circular for close spacings (1/8 and 1/16
wavelength), but those aren't "circular patterns". The antenna isn't at the center of the circle -- it's on the circumference(*). I hope you're not seriously presenting this as evidence that the gain can be zero dBi. The patterns and gains are, or should be, identical to those of half of a W8JK array with twice the spacing. For example, the pattern and gain of a dipole 1/8 wavelength above a perfect reflector is exactly the same as half the pattern of a W8JK array made of two of those dipoles spaced 1/4 wavelength. And those are far from an isotropic pattern. (*) The patterns in the book also are circular because of the scale factor which was chosen. If some other scale factor were chosen, they wouldn't be circular. A truly circular pattern (one with the antenna at the center) is circular regardless of the scale. You can illustrate this with the EZNEC demo or standard program. Open the dipole1.EZ example file and click FF Plot to generate a 2D pattern. Notice that the two lobes are roughly circular in shape (with the antenna at the circumference, as in Kraus' diagrams). Leaving the 2D plot on the screen, in the main window Options menu, select 2D Plot Scale and choose Linear dB. Note how the shape of the two lobes changes. You can get a wide variety of shapes by changing the scale -- this technique is very useful to antenna manufacturers to make their beam lobes look extra narrow. In the main window, change the Plot Type to Elevation. Due to the orientation of the antenna, you'll now get a plot of the pattern looking end-on to the dipole. This will be a truly circular pattern. Click FF Plot to generate the pattern. Change the 2D Plot Scale back to ARRL Type and note that it remains circular. An isotropic antenna has a circular pattern like this regardless of the orientation; the 3D plot is a sphere. And that's the only antenna which can have a free space gain as low as 0 dBi when there's no loss. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Richard Harrison wrote: Roy Lewallen , W7EL wrote: "I don`t have Kraus` 3rd edition (yet), but there`s graph on p 546 of thye second edition which I suspect is the same as the one Richard is referring to." I`m sure that`s it. I have Kraus` 1950 edition of "Antennas" and the identical groph is on page 327 in it. If you look at the patterns of a 1/2-wavelength antenna at spacings of 1/4, 1/2, and 1/16 wavelengths spacing from a flat reflector nearby, they are all nearly circular, indicating little distortion in their unblocked direction. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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