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"Walter Maxwell" wrote Reg asked if I could send my data as an email, so I converted the file to text format to be able to present the data in full here in this msg. I checked to see that the tabular format remained intact, and it did in Outlook Express, so here it is. I hope the tabular format will remain intact in your browsers. Be sure to give your screen maximum width. If it doesn't, let me know and I'll resend in PDF format. Walt, W2DU Dipole Terminal Impedance Data Obtained From Measurements at Various Heights Above Ground in the Frequency Range from 14.0 to 15.0 MHz. Measurements Made be W2DU at the W2DU site in DeLand, Florida. ============================================ Data received as an extension to this message. Fills screen very nicely. Thank you very much Walter for your trouble. ---- Reg, G4FGQ =========================================== |
"Wes Stewart" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 11:37:57 -0400, "Walter Maxwell" wrote: [snip] Walt, Your's was a particularly heroic effort and I commend you for it. I have taken the data you supplied in text form, converted it to comma separated values (csv) and imported it into XLZIZL where I can use your measured input values, add the two different transmission lines that you used and compute the load resistance at the antenna. I know that you supplied these results, but I find slightly different answers and I believe the reason is as follows: I'm guessing that you calibrated your two lines as one. If I'm wrong, slap me upside the head. Depending on the exact type, RG58(x) has slightly different Zo values. RG141 is specified as 50.0. Your Zo of 54 and your phase constant suggest a Vp of slightly less than .66, which is remarkably close to specification, but slightly low, considering the ~5% (2', RG141) of your composite line has Vp ~ 0.7. This is really getting fussy, but I'm beginning to believe that to possibly make a determination about ground characteristics based on antenna Z measurements, the measurements are going to have to be very precise. Wes You're right, Wes, I calibrated the composite line as one line. And I agree that if you calibrate them separately a small difference in the results will be obtained. But I believe the difference will be insignificant. Consider this: The nominal Zo of RG58 is 55 ohms and that of RG141 is 50, as you point out. The measured Zo of the composite line is 54 ohms. Now also consider this: The nominal vf for RG58 is 0.659 and for RG141 is 0.695. Thus the difference in the nominal Zo is 10% and the difference in vf is 5.5%, but the length of the short portion is only 5% of the total length. From these small differences I presumed the error would be significant. You didn't say exactly how much difference you found, or the procedure you used to determine it. So I made the following calculations from the data where the height is 10 ft at 14.55 MHz: First transforming the measured input impedance through the 40 ft of RG58, and then transforming the impedance found at the load end of the RG58 through the 2 ft of RG141. The results are as follows: At the load end of the RG58 and the input to the RG141: 69.41 - j19.19, At the load end of the RG141: ........................................79.23 - j3.25. At the load end of the RG141 using the composite data: 81.21 - j1.25. The difference in the R values is only 1.98 ohms and in the X values is only 2 ohms. I consider this degree of error insignificant. Would you not agree? Walt |
On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 23:17:40 -0400, "Walter Maxwell"
wrote: I'd like to hear your comments. Hi Walt, On first pass, the results are fairly consistent, but with two exceptions. I am not sure if this is in my translation to file formats suitable for Mathcad, or if they lie in your process. Anyway, a general description: The granularity of 50Khz appears to not be fine enough to find all peak resonances for the 9 of the 11 within the band. I have rendered the data into a sequence of 11 curves (one curve for each height) I call "Q" where that quality factor relates to the ratio of RL to |XL|. This was merely a survey to glance at all the data at once and to observe how the Mathcad sheet was taking shape. To this point this could as easily be accomplished in Excel. Continuing, I noted that two sets of height data moved retrograde to the general trend. That general trend revealed a family of peaks that moved up-frequency as the antenna height was raised. Two of the peaks were out of the band. One was above the band (the lowest antenna height) and the second was below the band (the second lowest antenna height). Of these two, I would suspect that the first, or lowest antenna height, was a curve rising to peak at the second (anti)resonance - otherwise, the trend is progressive with two exceptions. Those exceptions are found in raising the antenna from 8' to 10' and from 14' to 16'. The peaks in each of these step changes move counter to the trend: down-frequency when the height is raised. Again, this may be entirely a transcription error of my own that I need to investigate further. The biggest frequency shift comes with (this is a presumption) lifting the antenna up off the ground to the one foot level. The next biggest shift comes with the elevation change to the two foot level - and so on with progressively smaller shifts in frequency shift and progressively sharpening of the curves as the antenna is hiked higher. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
"Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 23:17:40 -0400, "Walter Maxwell" wrote: I'd like to hear your comments. Hi Walt, On first pass, the results are fairly consistent, but with two exceptions. I am not sure if this is in my translation to file formats suitable for Mathcad, or if they lie in your process. Anyway, a general description: The granularity of 50Khz appears to not be fine enough to find all peak resonances for the 9 of the 11 within the band. I have rendered the data into a sequence of 11 curves (one curve for each height) I call "Q" where that quality factor relates to the ratio of RL to |XL|. This was merely a survey to glance at all the data at once and to observe how the Mathcad sheet was taking shape. To this point this could as easily be accomplished in Excel. Continuing, I noted that two sets of height data moved retrograde to the general trend. That general trend revealed a family of peaks that moved up-frequency as the antenna height was raised. Two of the peaks were out of the band. One was above the band (the lowest antenna height) and the second was below the band (the second lowest antenna height). Of these two, I would suspect that the first, or lowest antenna height, was a curve rising to peak at the second (anti)resonance - otherwise, the trend is progressive with two exceptions. Those exceptions are found in raising the antenna from 8' to 10' and from 14' to 16'. The peaks in each of these step changes move counter to the trend: down-frequency when the height is raised. Again, this may be entirely a transcription error of my own that I need to investigate further. The biggest frequency shift comes with (this is a presumption) lifting the antenna up off the ground to the one foot level. The next biggest shift comes with the elevation change to the two foot level - and so on with progressively smaller shifts in frequency shift and progressively sharpening of the curves as the antenna is hiked higher. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Very interesting, Richard. I made a cursury check on the retrograde data, and it seems that the trend is in the original measured data. I compared readings of adjacent frequencies for two different heights where the retrograde occurs and found differences in original R values that I can explain only in the possibility of different degrees of soil wetness, because the measurements were not all taken on the same day. The date of each measurement is in the upper left corner of each page. Since the measurements were taken 22 years ago I can't remember whether I logged the rain vs non-rain days, and the original data is in obscure files in Florida. I would not have taken measurements during a rain, but the day after a rain the soil would still have been wetter than the day before the rain. Wetness is the only explanation I can think of for the jerk in the data. Are your Mathcad graphs in a format suitable for emailing? If so, I'd like to see them. Walt |
"Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... "Walter Maxwell" wrote Reg asked if I could send my data as an email, so I converted the file to text format to be able to present the data in full here in this msg. I checked to see that the tabular format remained intact, and it did in Outlook Express, so here it is. I hope the tabular format will remain intact in your browsers. Be sure to give your screen maximum width. If it doesn't, let me know and I'll resend in PDF format. Walt, W2DU Dipole Terminal Impedance Data Obtained From Measurements at Various Heights Above Ground in the Frequency Range from 14.0 to 15.0 MHz. Measurements Made be W2DU at the W2DU site in DeLand, Florida. ============================================ Data received as an extension to this message. Fills screen very nicely. Thank you very much Walter for your trouble. ---- Reg, G4FGQ =========================================== Fine, Reg, I hope you find the data of interest. Walt |
On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 15:31:07 -0400, "Walter Maxwell"
wrote: Wetness is the only explanation I can think of for the jerk in the data. Oh, where that comment might lead. :-) Are your Mathcad graphs in a format suitable for emailing? If so, I'd like to see them. Hi Walt, Sure, I will kit that up later today. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 15:31:07 -0400, "Walter Maxwell"
wrote: I compared readings of adjacent frequencies for two different heights where the retrograde occurs and found differences in original R values that I can explain only in the possibility of different degrees of soil wetness, because the measurements were not all taken on the same day. Hi All, This is a life's lesson in the value of context and measurement, as well as in the discipline of taking notes. Walt's memory suggests a reason for the perturbation observed in the data, and it is not unreasonable. I would suggest that there is some (however slight) likelihood that the correlations may be backwards in that most of the days followed rain, and these perturbations were on dry days. Before or after is not the issue. Before or after is a matter of separability which is more important. With analysis, Walt's conjecture can be tested against the data and what it reveals about the impact the ground's proximity had on the antenna. His data, either way, already supports that ground is measurable within the data that falls outside of the spread of noise and error. Even if Walt slipped an instrument reading or injected statistical noise, he did it so consistently that he was always in error in the same direction (this is called systematic error). This may impact the accuracy of the final answer, but it does not impact the thesis' general conclusion. What is more, even if such mischance occurred (and I doubt it), it is recoverable with one or several cardinal measurements to correct the earlier bias. This round of discussion also reveals that bad data is as good as good data. Those who discard results and tailor their reports stand a good chance of not discovering how to fix their problems when they are shown to be in serious error (which is to say they probably rejected good results). I pointed this threat out in another thread that linked to exhaustive ground data that showed hills composed of fresh water. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Ian White wrote:
"The real technical question is how many, and how long, will be "just enough" for "here"?" Reminds me of the trailer house designer pulling out reaces until the whole projkect collapses, then rebuilding with only the last brace removed reinstalled. You don`t need any radials with a horizontal dipole. Broadcasters are launching ground waves to reach a local audience. Amateurs may want ro reach DX with sky waves. For radials under an earth mounted vertical, there`s no magic number or length. You can add to the count until resistance elimination fades. You can lengthen them until the current at their tips is almost zero. Or, you can just decide how much you will spend on wire. I read that quantity of radials is better than longer radials. If you want some idea of how conductive soil is, I read that a Variac, ground rods , ammeter and voltmeter is the way to go. Adjust current between the rods to one ampere with the Variac. Resistance between the rods is then the volts between them. Terman has already supplied Table 22-1 "TYPICAL GROUND CONSTANTS" on page 308 of his 1955 edition for estimating dielectric constant and ground conductivity. At high frequencies, poor ground conductivity takes eome energy from the reflected wave and the combined direct and reflected wave can`t be a complete cancellation. The direct wave alone is stronger than its combination with an out of phase wave. Ground wave propagetion fades in a short distance at high freqiuencies. So what use does the DXer have for soil conductivity? Isn`t something like Terman`s Table good enough, unless he is considering laying his antenna on or near the soil? Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Walter Maxwell wrote:
Hasn't the copyright expired on material published in 1937? Hm. The way I read http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.html#hlc, it has. It looks to me like the original copyright was good for 28 years and for copyrights originally issued in 1937, renewal (if done) was good for another 28. That would put it in the public domain after 1993. I'd sure appreciate comments from someone who's actually familiar with the law -- it's pretty convoluted and I'm not at all confident about my interpretation. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 16:13:55 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote: Walter Maxwell wrote: Hasn't the copyright expired on material published in 1937? Hm. The way I read http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.html#hlc, it has. It looks to me like the original copyright was good for 28 years and for copyrights originally issued in 1937, renewal (if done) was good for another 28. That would put it in the public domain after 1993. I'd sure appreciate comments from someone who's actually familiar with the law -- it's pretty convoluted and I'm not at all confident about my interpretation. True it gets very complicated, especially when the likes of Disney get an act through Congress to copyright Mickey Mouse forever. http://writ.news.findlaw.com/comment..._sprigman.html Unfortunately, the Supreme Court was not interested in the constitutional aspects of this monstrosity and let it stand. The average citizen can afford to bribe his local officials (democracy in action), but when it comes to Congress, you need real money. Publish the paper Walt, the authors are all gone (I think, but you know better than I) the IRE is gone too; what are they going to do, come back from the grave and sue you? |
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