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#1
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hasan schiers wrote:
"Ian White GM3SEK" wrote in message ... Original poster said: I was thinking of feeding it at the corner, I think it will be close to 50 ohms. Ian said: That's where it must be fed. Anywhere else, and it won't act as a half-square (except the other top corner of course). ================================================= === eh? Fed at the bottom via a parallel tuned circuit works, no ? You can see my article in Ham Radio Magazine from many years ago on how to feed it that way, (which is really the classical feed for this antenna...the corner fed, with all of it's inherent problems came along a lot later, AFAIK) Simply use a parallal tuned circuit at the base of either vertical, and tap up from the bottom (ground side) of the coil for 50 ohms. The tuning cap for the coil can be a piece of coax (at "x" pf per foot). Sorry, Hasan, you're absolutely right of course. I remember your Ham Radio article very well. What I should have said was "if you intend to use coax feed..." It's also true that coax feed is not as easy as it looks, because of the "hot feedline" problem. In many ways a small ground-mounted ATU is better. Since the half-square is a monoband antenna, the ATU is "set and forget" and it's very easy to get going as you say. Well, not quite monoband... with different ATU settings, a 40m half-square will also work as an end-fed half-wave "inverted U" for short skip on 80m. I ran this antenna for years, and I had the mistaken notion that it was a "half-square". Wonders never cease...I would have thought the editor of the mag, a seemingly knowledgable fellow, would have caught my mistake. very big grin, tongue in cheek Even editors can have a bad day... looks like yesterday was one of them :-) -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
#2
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Hi Ian,
I thought you meant something like that, but I couldn't figure out how to say it, and thought it would be "cute" to make a little joke at your comments. Then I thought of "if you want to feed it with coax" way to state what you were saying, but that wouldn't work either, because the tapped coil is coax fed too. The real issue is how "easy" it is to direct feed with coax by using the corner feed...but it has a host of common mode issues that aren't that much easier to deal with than making the coil/cap combo in the first place. The only thing that maks the corner feed "easy" is doing it wrong and ignoring the common mode problems with routing of the feedline. While I did write the article for HR mag, I must admit my only contribution to the "art" was the clever use of a piece of coax for a high voltage, easily tuned capacitor. If I hadn't hit on that solution, I would never have even tried the half-square, as the weather protection and availability of kw handling caps is a real issue. I would encourage anyone wanting to do the half-square (a marvelous antenna) to consider a piece of coil stock and a few inches of coax for the feed point, in place of the corner feed. (Of course, this requires a VSWR bridge or Antenna Analyzer to adjust the tap on the coil, but it certainly isn't rocket science.) I used the 40m half-square for many years and it performed flawlessly and required zero maintenance in a harsh Iowa climate of wind, snow and ice. The method I used for building it couldn't have been simpler. What I did was get out a long piece of stranded wire, slid two egg insulators on 33 feet, twisted the first insulator once or twice to anchor the insulator, slid the 2nd insulator 66 feet from the first, twisted it once or twice to anchor the 2nd insulator (now we have both corners), and then measured another 33 feet, and cut the wire. The nice part about this is, no soldering at the corners, one continuous piece of wire and away ya go. I then pounded a ground rod in under the first corner, mounted the air dux coil/coax cap bottom directly to the rod and the bottom of the first vertical wire to the top of a plexiglas plate that held the coil. Just about as simple as one could get. All the strain is on the plexiglass. I waterproofed the coax with a blob of clear silicon rubber....caution here....the antenna will stop working until the blob "cures", as it shorts out the open end of the coax (I chased this problem for a few hours until I realized that until cured, the silicon rubber is a short circuit. This configuration lasted many years and required no attention. I did end up putting a plastic box over the coil to keep the snow/ice off the coil, but that's all it took. I've often thought of putting another one up here at the new qth, but I don't have trees in the right place like I did at the other qth. Anywho, my comments were all in good fun. Your observations evoked a lot of pleasant memories from years ago about an antenna that was instructive and fun to build, not to mention a sterling performer on 40m. p.s., yes I did run it on 80m as well, and I was surprised how well it worked, but then again, it becomes and end fed half-wave "bent" antenna. Two for the price of one, "sort of". 73, ....hasan, N0AN "Ian White GM3SEK" wrote in message ... hasan schiers wrote: "Ian White GM3SEK" wrote in message ... Original poster said: I was thinking of feeding it at the corner, I think it will be close to 50 ohms. Ian said: That's where it must be fed. Anywhere else, and it won't act as a half-square (except the other top corner of course). ================================================ ==== eh? Fed at the bottom via a parallel tuned circuit works, no ? You can see my article in Ham Radio Magazine from many years ago on how to feed it that way, (which is really the classical feed for this antenna...the corner fed, with all of it's inherent problems came along a lot later, AFAIK) Simply use a parallal tuned circuit at the base of either vertical, and tap up from the bottom (ground side) of the coil for 50 ohms. The tuning cap for the coil can be a piece of coax (at "x" pf per foot). Sorry, Hasan, you're absolutely right of course. I remember your Ham Radio article very well. What I should have said was "if you intend to use coax feed..." It's also true that coax feed is not as easy as it looks, because of the "hot feedline" problem. In many ways a small ground-mounted ATU is better. Since the half-square is a monoband antenna, the ATU is "set and forget" and it's very easy to get going as you say. Well, not quite monoband... with different ATU settings, a 40m half-square will also work as an end-fed half-wave "inverted U" for short skip on 80m. I ran this antenna for years, and I had the mistaken notion that it was a "half-square". Wonders never cease...I would have thought the editor of the mag, a seemingly knowledgable fellow, would have caught my mistake. very big grin, tongue in cheek Even editors can have a bad day... looks like yesterday was one of them :-) -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
#3
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If you were to use aluminum for the verticals rather than wire, what would
the shortening factor be? Doug "Ian White GM3SEK" wrote in message ... hasan schiers wrote: "Ian White GM3SEK" wrote in message ... Original poster said: I was thinking of feeding it at the corner, I think it will be close to 50 ohms. Ian said: That's where it must be fed. Anywhere else, and it won't act as a half-square (except the other top corner of course). ================================================ ==== eh? Fed at the bottom via a parallel tuned circuit works, no ? You can see my article in Ham Radio Magazine from many years ago on how to feed it that way, (which is really the classical feed for this antenna...the corner fed, with all of it's inherent problems came along a lot later, AFAIK) Simply use a parallal tuned circuit at the base of either vertical, and tap up from the bottom (ground side) of the coil for 50 ohms. The tuning cap for the coil can be a piece of coax (at "x" pf per foot). Sorry, Hasan, you're absolutely right of course. I remember your Ham Radio article very well. What I should have said was "if you intend to use coax feed..." It's also true that coax feed is not as easy as it looks, because of the "hot feedline" problem. In many ways a small ground-mounted ATU is better. Since the half-square is a monoband antenna, the ATU is "set and forget" and it's very easy to get going as you say. Well, not quite monoband... with different ATU settings, a 40m half-square will also work as an end-fed half-wave "inverted U" for short skip on 80m. I ran this antenna for years, and I had the mistaken notion that it was a "half-square". Wonders never cease...I would have thought the editor of the mag, a seemingly knowledgable fellow, would have caught my mistake. very big grin, tongue in cheek Even editors can have a bad day... looks like yesterday was one of them :-) -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
#4
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DOUGLAS SNOWDEN wrote:
If you were to use aluminum for the verticals rather than wire, what would the shortening factor be? If it is end-fed, as Hasan recommends[*] then the exact height of the vertical parts wouldn't matter much. The main difference would be in the high-angle radiation from the horizontal part. That radiation is roughly canceled, but in a half-square the cancellation is never complete... which means any differences would be very hard to hear. But be aware that the voltage at the bottom of the far end is very high indeed. This is no place to use a metal ground post and a thin sleeve of plastic pipe! I've drilled holes through thick PVC support blocks by voltage-feeding a half-wave vertical, and this open end is worse. -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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