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On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 20:15:03 -0400, Mike Coslo
wrote: The main reason I ask though, is that I thought I heard here some time ago, that a dipole would perform better over a good ground system. Hi Mike, You heard correctly. The ground system lowers losses which translate to more power out. This is not method of controlling TOA, simply loss - all angles of radiation improve. I don't have the results published, but I have a near field study showing interesting results for a dipole over ground, and over shielded ground at: http://home.comcast.net/~kb7qhc/ante...pole/index.htm 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
"Richard Clark" wrote
The main reason I ask though, is that I thought I heard here some time ago, that a dipole would perform better over a good ground system. Hi Mike, You heard correctly. The ground system lowers losses which translate to more power out. This is not method of controlling TOA, simply loss - all angles of radiation improve. _________________ Note that the intrinsic, free space pattern/gain of a dipole does not depend in any way on the presence or nature of a ground plane. Reflections from the ground (and other objects) can modify the classic donut shape of the dipole pattern and produce relative gain in some directions, at the expense of gain in other directions. But the "power out," or absorbed by a matched dipole will be the same in any case. A low-resistance ground system will increase the fields radiated from an antenna that uses the earth as an 'image' part of the complete radiation system, such as the vertical mast radiators used in MW broadcasting. With a perfect ground in this situation, the base current in the vertical mast is twice what it would be for the same power applied to an equivalent wire dipole (less a ground system) in free space -- resulting in 3 dB system gain. RF |
Richard Fry wrote:
"With a perfect ground in this situation (MW vertical tower) the base current in the vertical mast is twice what it would be for the same power applied to an equivalent wire dipole (less a ground system) in free space -- resulting in 3 dB system gain." I`m not agreeing or disagreeing, just listing facts. Arnold B. Bailey in "TV and Other Receiving Antennas"on p. 500 gives the gain of a horizontal half wave wire (thin), center-fed as zero dB at its center frequency. He should. It is his reference for all other antennas. His authority is the famous G.H. Brown in Proc. I.R.E., Vol. 33, p. 257, April 1945. Antenna resistance = 60 ohms. On page 538, Bailey gives the free-apsce gain of the quarter-wave vertical antenna. It too has a gain of zero dB = 0 dBd. His authority is A.S. Meier & W.P. Summers in Proc. I.R.E., Vol. 37, p. 609, June 1949. Antenna resistance 28 ohms. Power is current squared times the resistance.. Terman says on page 886 of his 1955 edition: "Effect of Ground on Directive Gain of Ungrounded Antennas. Consider an antenna is far enough from ground so that the total power radiated by a given set of antenna currents is independent of the presence or absence of the ground. Then a ground reflection that reinforces the main lobe will double the field strength of the main lobe, and so will increase the directive gain of the antenna system by a factor of 4." (thet`s a power ratio of 4) On page 885 Terman says: " Consequentially (due to ground reflection nulls), to obtain strong radiation in the directions approaching the horizontal using a horizontally polarized radiating system, it is necessary that the height of the antenna above the earth be of the order of one wavelength or more." Also on page 885 Terman says: "In the case of horizontal polarization the effect of imperfect ground is seen to be quite small, especially at low vertical angles. With vertical polarization the ground imperfections have greater effect; in particular, the filling of the nulls at moderately low vertical angles is very pronounced." For the power to be the same in a vertical mast and a wire dipole, the I squared R must be the same in both cases. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Mike Coslo wrote: Here is the scenario: Hamshack on the west side of the house. OCF dipole between two trees running perpendicular over the house with the Balun directly above the shack (now *that* is handy) Butternut vertical on the east side of the house. 12 radials so far. Now here is what brings about the question. Over the winter months, I had to have my sewer line to the street replaced, which ended up making a huge mess out of my front yard. This means that I will probably end up tilling and replanting a large part of the yard. Is there any point to laying radials in the front yard? They would be quite a ways (~50 feet) from the radials around the Butternut. Emphatically NO. The main reason I ask though, is that I thought I heard here some time ago, that a dipole would perform better over a good ground system. Maybe if the "good ground" is an acre or two of sheet copper and the dipole is a half wave above it. - Mike KB3EIA - w3rv |
I wrote:
"With a perfect ground in this situation (MW vertical tower) the base current in the vertical mast is twice what it would be for the same power applied to an equivalent wire dipole (less a ground system) in free space -- resulting in 3 dB system gain." to which Richard Harrison responded. ____________ Excuse my inaccurate statement about that current, and thanks for catching it. The input resistance of a 1/4-wave monopole working against a perfect ground plane is 36.5 ohms,* or half that of a 1/2-wave dipole in free space. A given input power then results in 1.414X more current in the monopole than the dipole. Hence the monopole radiates 1.414X the field of the dipole. And, as shown in Kraus 3rd edition, Table 6-2, a 1/4-wave monopole against a perfect ground has 3 dB more gain than a 1/2-wave dipole in free space. Increasing the field from the 1/2-wave, free space dipole by 1.414X in the above example would require doubling its input power (3dB), which would result in the same 1.414X increase in its current -- to the same value as seen in the monopole with 1/2 that power. * per Kraus 3rd Edition, p 567 RF |
Richard Harrison wrote:
Mike, KB3EIA wrote: "The main reason I ask, is that I thought I heard here some time ago, that a dipole would perform better over a good ground system." It may not. At a distant point, the received signal is probably composed of two parts that started their journey as an incident ray and a ray which was the incident ray`s reflection off on a tangent from the surface of the earth. If by good fortune these two rays happened to arrive at the distant receiving point in-phase they would present a stronger signal than the direct ray alone, and certainly a stronger signal than a combination of two out-of-phase signals. Unfortunately, the incident wave`s reflection is always out-of-phase with the incident wave which produces it at the reflection point. A perfect reflector would ensure the reflection was equal in magnitude as well as out-of-phase to the incident ray. Unless you get a difference in path length between incident and reflected rays to invert the phase of one of the rays as compared with the other, they will tend to cancel. You might be better off without the reflected ray. The ground connection in a vertical antenna system is entirely different. Half the antenna system is the antenna`s image in the earth. The connection to the earth or to a capacitive coupling to the earth (elevated radials or ground-plane) carries the r-f current to the earth side of the system. Any resistance in your gtound system directly adds to loss in the system.With the usual vertical antenna system, radials are essential.for efficiency.. This was a long-winded way to say you don`t need radials with a horizontal dipole for r-f efficiengy. You do need a ground connection for electrical safety and lightning protection. Radials work well for these too. I'm beginning to think that what makes an antenna "good" is the time at which a person uses it! - Mike KB3EIA - |
This is unfortunately an example of arriving at the right result by
using the wrong (actually, incomplete) method. The field from a conductor is proportional not only to the current flowing in it, but also the length of the conductor. So if you put the same current into a dipole and monopole, and assuming they have the same current distribution, the field from the dipole will be twice the field from the monopole. So let's start again. The input R of a monopole over an infinite perfect ground is 1/2 the resistance of a free space dipole, so for a given power input the monopole current is 1.414 times the dipole current, as you said. Ok so far. But because the dipole is twice as long and with the same current distribution (and oriented in such a way that the fields from the two halves add in phase), the field from the dipole is 2/1.414 = 1.414 times the field from the monopole. However, each ray from the monopole is reflected from ground, resulting in two rays adding in phase at a distant point. This doubles the field from the monopole, so it's now 2/1.414 = 1.414 times the field from the free space dipole. This is the same result, but with the two additional important factors of radiator length and ground reflection included. A good check of the final result is to note that, neglecting loss, the average field intensity from *any* antenna in free space has to be 3 dB less than the average field intensity from *any* antenna over an infinite ground plane, if the same power is applied to each. The reason is simply that the supplied power is spread over half the volume when the ground plane is present. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Richard Fry wrote: . . . The input resistance of a 1/4-wave monopole working against a perfect ground plane is 36.5 ohms,* or half that of a 1/2-wave dipole in free space. A given input power then results in 1.414X more current in the monopole than the dipole. Hence the monopole radiates 1.414X the field of the dipole. And, as shown in Kraus 3rd edition, Table 6-2, a 1/4-wave monopole against a perfect ground has 3 dB more gain than a 1/2-wave dipole in free space. Increasing the field from the 1/2-wave, free space dipole by 1.414X in the above example would require doubling its input power (3dB), which would result in the same 1.414X increase in its current -- to the same value as seen in the monopole with 1/2 that power. * per Kraus 3rd Edition, p 567 RF |
Hmmm, I was working on the "phases of the moon", you might have something...
grin Regards, John |
Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 20:15:03 -0400, Mike Coslo wrote: The main reason I ask though, is that I thought I heard here some time ago, that a dipole would perform better over a good ground system. Hi Mike, You heard correctly. The ground system lowers losses which translate to more power out. This is not method of controlling TOA, simply loss - all angles of radiation improve. I don't have the results published, but I have a near field study showing interesting results for a dipole over ground, and over shielded ground at: Interesting indeed! - Mike KB3EIA - |
You heard correctly. The ground system lowers losses which translate to more power out. This is not method of controlling TOA, simply loss - all angles of radiation improve. ====================================== Some buried wires under a horizontal dipole, at a height of 1/4 or 1/2 wavelengths, will, in theory, reduce losses. Some old wife, once upon a time, must have read something about it in a book without bothering about the magnitude of the effect. It's not enough to be detectable. So don't listen to your voices or waste time digging up your back yard and getting back ache. There's far too much of old wives reading things in books and ill-written radio magazines, getting the wrong ideas, and then plagiarising them. Which innocent people hear about 3rd or 4th hand or n'th hand. The fabled SWR meter is another example. ---- Reg. |
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