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Hi David,
You wrote, "The decoupling is via a 1/4 wave sleeve that provides high impedance for RF returning along outer coax and also as the second 1/2 of the dipole. " EXACTLY how is this built? The details of construction make a BIG difference in performance! (There's a lot of BAD info about it out there...) It's not a bad idea to ALSO put some additional decoupling further down the feedline. If your spectrum analyzer/field strength meter is far enough away from the antenna you are testing, then it should provide a reasonable indication of relative antenna radiation performance. The SWR indication, if properly calibrated and given that you are apparently exciting the antenna with a source whose output impedance matches your feedline, should also be a good indication of power actually absorbed by the antenna. That is, lowest SWR represents maximum power absorbed by the antenna. Presumably that power is being radiated as RF, mostly, and not dissipated as heat. But where the RF radiation goes depends on the pattern of currents excited on the conductors that compose the antenna, and nearby conductors as well (such as the feedline). What you probably want is standard resonant half-wave dipole currents on your vertical dipole, and no (very little) antenna current on the feedline and on support structures. By the way, whether the antenna is resonant or not is of little real importance, so long as you can efficiently feed power to it and the antenna currents are in the right places and not the wrong places. But it happens that with your antenna, if things are working properly (properly decoupled feedline, etc), you probably will see lowest SWR at half-wave resonance. If you have no other matching going on, the lowest SWR will probably be about 1.5:1 with 50 ohm feedline. You could add parts to get a better match if you wished. And as you can probably tell from all that, I'm suspecting that your decoupling sleeve, with associated dielectrics in that area, probably isn't doing a very good job... Also...Joe noted that your coax feedline may well be a length that accounts for the SWR peaks and valleys. (I think it may be about twice as long as Joe wrote...but same idea.) Do you see the peaks and valleys when you terminate the line in the precision 2:1 load? If you do NOT, then it's a further indication that the feedline has antenna currents on it, because the flat 2:1 is an indication that your transmission line is matched to the calibration impedance of the SWR bridge, and if that's the case, the SWR bridge should be giving at reasonably accurate estimate of the actual line SWR. If you DO see the SWR ripples vs frequency with just the precision load, either the load isn't "flat" or the line is not the same impedance as the SWR bridge is calibrated to, and the differing impedances is by far the most probable explanation if the line length is right. Cheers, Tom |
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