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![]() Tom Someone might refer to you as a "spoiled brat" regarding your interest in the details. I consider you to be a carefull thinker. Jerry "K7ITM" wrote in message oups.com... Brian Kelly wrote: Which leads into another head-scratcher I've had in the past. I've had a bad time coupling a GDO to quad elements because it takes a couple turns of wire near the GDO coil to get enough coupling between the quad element and the GDO. Which in turn means that I've shortened the element length and the result is wrong. What's your suggestion on a method to accurately measure the resonant frequencies of the quarter-wave lines in this exercise? OK, I admit to being a spoiled brat when it comes to making measurements like this. The easiest for me would be to set up a network analyzer, with the analyzer's source and receiver each coupled lightly to the line. But there are other ways. You may not even need a signal generator. You could loosely couple a receiver to the line, and loosely couple an antenna to it on the other side, and as you tune the receiver across the resonance, you should notice a sharp peak in atmospheric noise. With a loaded Q of a few hundred, the peak at 10MHz would be a very few tens of kHz wide. You could also build an oscillator which uses the tuned line as the frequency-determining element, and just count the frequency of the oscillator. A simple version of a network analyzer could be done by lightly coupling an RF generator into the line, and putting an RF detector across the line a small distance up from the shorted end. I'd use either a simple diode detector, which can have pretty high input impedance, or one of the Linear Technology or Analog devices RF detectors, but since those are lower impedance, tap them down very far on the line. -- I'd expect a 10MHz quarter-wave resonator made from 600 ohm line using AWG14 wires to have an unloaded Q around 350. You can achieve that loose coupling by calling the center of the short across the end "ground" and tapping up just one or two percent of the length of the line from that for the "hot" connection. Or you can couple in with a loop, say of a diameter about equal to the line spacing, held next to the shorted end of the line. "Reference Data for Radio Engineers" shows various coupling schemes in the "Transmission Lines" chapter. As long as you keep the coupling light (to keep the loaded Q high), and are consistent in the way you arrange things, you should be able to measure the resonance to within a fraction of a percent repeatability, if not absolute accuracy. Relative measurements should be all you need in this case. And I assume it's obvious that though the resonant line will not have exactly the same VF as an antenna, as you increase the wire spacing, it should approach the same effect as you'll see in the antenna. Then compare with the formulas Reg posted, and if you see significant differences, try to resolve what's causing them. By the way, one place where the "velocity factor" effect might be noticable is in parasitic elements of an array in which you're trying to achieve maximum gain. The element tuning will affect phasing among the elements and therefore gain. If the design is narrow-band, high-gain, you might actually notice some effect from the insulation. Cheers, Tom |
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