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![]() "Dave Platt" wrote in message ... In article tJLne.13595$Vm4.9195@trnddc01, Dale Parfitt wrote: How can a T match have show a bias- it is balanced. Virtually all the serious EME arrays use this matching technique and show the major lobe dead off the front. Are they feeding directly off of the coax, or do they use a halfwave (or other) balun between the coax and the T? Seems to me that a T directly from coax could show some amount of imbalance. The center-conductor current would have only one pathway to feed (the T), while the shield current would have two (the other side of the T, and back down the feedline). If the outside of the feedline was an integral number of halfwaves down to the point at which it's grounded, there might be enough current flow on the outside of the feedline to disturb the balance and change the pattern somewhat. Sticking a half-wave coax balun at the input of the T ought to resolve this pretty well, no? yes, that is how most of them i have seen work. a 1/2 wave phasing line is used to feed the 'opposite' side of the T making it properly balanced. |
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