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Well, I just a new experimenter with antennas--in the past have only played
with "tried and true" designs.... However, I can't help but see that three cu foil horizontal "monopoles" worked off an aluminum body of the rocket does present itself to the mind... Cecil is a good modeler with EZNEC, I am hoping he will find this interesting enough to comment... and of course the OM Roy is acknowledged top expert! If three monopoles, each fed off a quarter matching section of thin coax, and worked off the counterpoise of the aluminum rocket body "counterpoise", would present a load of say ~11 ohms (or, does it work that way? or, would that present a load of ~36 ohms?), then a 4:1 UnUn could be used, "backwards", to present a 44 ohm to the xmitter--50/44 = negligible SWR... one monopole on each fin.... While NOT circular--maybe close enough to provide acceptable signal strength... If this is plausible, a formula for cutting a 1/4 wave as SHF, and cut a bit longer, then trimmed to resonance by coupling to a GDO capable of 900+ Mhz.... But, you are probably too close to launch time for extensive experimentation... or, are some of those students' hams to assist? But then, my mom always said I read too much "science fiction." Maybe these other guys will apply their knowledge here and both you and I will pick up some points... On a side note, two crossed dipoles make a turnstile antenna, this is a circular polarized antenna... but crossing two of those fins is impossible... maybe the dipoles can be separated by some distance and still work... here I can only wonder... indeed, if you choose this, would be a shame to leave that third fin out there, naked... grin Whatever, GOOD LUCK!!! Warmest regards, John wrote in message ... | Thanks for all the fine suggestions. | Some general comments and answers to questions...: | | 1)The body of the rocket is Aluminum. | | 2)The receiving station is right next to the rocket so as it launches | it will be going directly away from the telemetry transmitter. | | 3)The nose cone is out as it detaches and comes down via seperate | parachute at the time of recovery. | | 4)No roll control system so the rocket will be expected to spin | slowly. | | 5)1W of output power. | | | It looks like a cu tape dipole on the fin with some glass over the top | might be best solution, it seems no one but me is worried about the | carbon fiber. | | So using 1/4" cu Tape glued to carbon fiber ,how long should it be | and should the ends be round, square or pointed? (910 Mhz) | | | The rocket has three fins 120 degrees apart, could I put an antenna on | two fins and get quasi circular polarization? | If so how should I drive the two antennas? | (I'm not an antenna guy so please try and be specific, ie use a 21.5cm | peice of Rg-XX) | | I have no portable antenna test quipment for 910Mhz, but I can carry | the resulant antenna into a friends work and use a 2Ghz spectrum | analizer with a tracking generator if that would be useful to test | antennas. | | | | If I have just one fin antenna how can I build a circularly polarized | antenna for the ground side? | (I presently have a 8dbd loop yagi for the receiver, H or V | polarization, not ciurcular..) | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | On Fri, 06 May 2005 14:29:27 -0700, Wes Stewart | wrote: | | On Thu, 05 May 2005 21:43:43 -0700, wrote: | | I've voulenteered to help the SDSU mechanical engineering studens get | telemetry from their rocket see: | http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~sharring/sdsurocket.html. | | I have all the electronics working, I'm using a commercial 910Mhz | telemetry radio, I have every thing working except the antenna. | | For the last launch I burred a dipole in the plywood fin, alas | the rocket did not launch it caught fire and burned up the fins. | (It did not burn as far as the electronics.) | | The new fins are carbon fiber composite so no antenna there... | | The rocket will get to mach 2 so small wires sticking out will | probably break or burn up. | | | I have enough power and ground side gain that I need no gain | from the rocket, an isotropic radiator with 3db of loss would be fine. | | | Any suggestions? | | | My ideas and thoughts: | | 1)Simple 1/4 wave vertical sticking out the bottom plate of the rocket | near the engine. | | Pros: | simple. | Cons: | lots of metal to block the signal and mess up the pattern. | Not clear if the ionized exhaust will block the signal. | | Phoenix, Standard and other missiles use rear data link antennas | buried behind the rocket plume without trouble. Of course these are | at X-band, not 900 MHz, and receive only with *really* high powered | transmitters. | | Antenna pattern is almost exactly wrong. | | (Telemetry really needed for recovery tracking so ionization fading is | not a deal killer) | | | 2)Horizontal dipole at the bottom plate of engine. | All the problems of #1 except pattern. | | | | | 3)Put Fiberglass windows in the electronics bay near the nose of the | rocket. One window on each side, Driving two hosrizontal dipoles with | a power splitter, one dipole on each side. | | Pros: Easy to do. | Cons: | I don't know what the pattern would be like, or exactly how I shoudl | phase the two antennas on opposite sides. (Some metal between then so | not a clean situation.) | | Resources: | It have a minicircuits SMA 2 way power splitter, and can make precise | metal parts (0.002" or better). | I do not have any antenna testing equipment that is any good at | 900Mhz. | so any suggestions... | | Well, the fact that you don't have any test equipment is a real | downer. | | The best suggestion, although I think time is an issue for you, would | be to go to a commercial vendor and beg for a "contribution". My | former employer (Hughes) gave money, time and materials to various | universities all of the time. | | The elegant solution would be a conformal patch but I imagine this is | beyond your resources. | | http://www.uaf.edu/asgp/asrp/srp4/sr...chantennas.htm | | It doesn't look like there is any roll stabilization so you might need | some pseudo "omni" pattern, during flight. But if you are only | looking for TM after burnout and during the return to Earth (I assume | dangling on a parachute) then you will know the attitude (at least | "up" and "down"). Personally, I think that flight dynamics data | during the powered phase would be more interesting to engineering | students. [g]. | | Fiberglass window(s) with dipole(s) behind them would probably work | okay. Two with equal power split would be fine, however, one might do | okay too. | | Regardless, it sounds like a fun project. Have fun. | |
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