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I think he was providing a simplified model by eliminating phasing
lines. As I understood it he meant that there 3 outputs from the TX with 3 equal length feedlines or a special feedline, and that all are in a rotating 120 degree progression. John Smith wrote: BKR: Reg has " There is a 3-phase transmitter feeding a 3-phase antenna..." Does this mean the transmitter is powered off 3-phase 60 cycle (if so, really doesn't affect the antenna) or is the transmitter final somehow constructed with a tank supplying 3-phase rf??? Then the "3-phase antenna", is each monopole, dipole fed though different lengths of feedline, with one 0 degree length, one 120 degree length, and one 240 degree--electrical lengths? Those brits can be tricky yanno! grin John On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 21:05:28 -0600, BKR wrote: Just a hint: Think of how a turnstile antenna works. That one works in the horizontal plane with 90 degree phasing. Check the radiation patern. Reg Edwards wrote: There is a 3-phase transmitter feeding a 3-phase antenna via a 3-wire transmission line. The antenna consists of three 1/4-wave horizontal radiators spaced at 120 degee intervals. Is the radiation pattern in the horizontal plane perfectly omni-directional? ---- Reg. |
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