Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Ham op wrote: I did a SWR plot before and after changing it and here's the sticking point: Before, I had a 2:1 range from 6.900-7.280 and now I've got 7.000-7.300 but the minimum SWR went from 1.10:1 to 1.55:1. My Elecraft KAT2 autotuner handles that very easily but I'm wondering what would happen if I added 12 feet to my 50' of 450 ohm ladder line? Would the minimum SWR get better or just move? Or both? Does it really matter? (I don't think it matters based on what I've read here). SWR has nothing to do with the length of line [assuming low loss line]. True in one respect, but not necessarily a complete answer in this case (I think). SWR is determined solely by the antenna to transmission line impedance. [e.g. an antenna input impedance of 70 ohms and a 50 ohm cable has a SWR of 1.4:1 ALL the time]. True, but that's not the whole story here. If I understand the OP's setup properly, he's trimmed his antenna wire down to be a half-wave 40-meter dipole. He's then feeding it with a combination of ladder line, a coaxial balun, and coax to the shack. If that's a true picture of the situation, then I would expect the SWR at the shack end of the coax to vary quite a lot as the length of the ladder line is changed. Reasoning: the antenna's feedpoint impedance wouldn't be too far from the 50-to-70 ohm range, give its resonant length and its height above ground. This impedance will be transformed by the 450-ohm ladder line, and the impedance at the ladder-line/coax joining point will depend on the degree of transformation. If the ladder line is cut to be an integral number of electrical half-wavelengths, it would mirror the antenna feedpoint impedance to the coax. There's be a good match, the SWR on the coax would be somewhere between 1:1 and 1.5:1, and the rig would quite possibly be happy without even needing its internal ATU. This is Good. On the other hand, if the ladder line is an odd number of quarter-wavelengths, it would transform the antenna's feedpoint impedance up to a much higher value (in excess of 1000 ohms). This would result in a severe mismatch at the ladder-line/coax joining point, and a high SWR on the coax. I'd expect both high losses, and a significant amount of RF appearing on the coax braid (the coiled-coax choke balun wouldn't have enough choking reactance). The rig's ATU might not be able to match this load at all. This would be Bad. In these two extreme cases, the SWR on the ladder line would be high, and wouldn't change appreciably as the ladder-line length was changed. Losses in the ladder line should be minimal. The SWR on the coax section, and the impedance presented to the rig, would vary anywhere from "utterly benign" to "nasty and unacceptable" depending on the length of the ladder line. The same basic reasoning would seem to apply, I think, for any antenna feedpoint impedance other than one which matches that of the ladder line. Although changing the ladder-line length won't affect the SWR on the ladder line, it can affect the SWR on the coax section (possibly by a lot!) due to the varying transformation of the antenna's feedpoint impedance. This is, in a way, the converse of Cecil's "no tuner" matching arrangment, which uses a tuned ladder-line feeder to transform a dipole's feedpoint impedance down to 50 ohms on multiple bands by adjusting the feeder length. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. | Antenna | |||
Raising a 40m dipole | Antenna | |||
dipole question | Antenna | |||
How to measure soil constants at HF | Antenna | |||
Dipole vs. Delta loop vs. Quad loop -pratical experience | Antenna |