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how to check balun
Just put up a 140' dipole with 450 ohm ladderline feed.
I'm using an unbalanced tuner with a Spi-Ro 1:1 balun on the output side of the tuner. The balun is one of those designed to be used right at the center feed point of the antenna, with coax as the feedline. I think it should work out fine being directly at the output of the tuner, with ladderline going up to the antenna. However, there is some disconnect between the rig and antenna. I suspect my balun may be bad internally. What's a good quick and dirty check with an ohmeter (don't know if these baluns are current or voltage types, so maybe include a checkout procedure for both kinds). I'm just starting to fault isolate. Since the balun is a new link in the chain from rig to antenna, it's my first suspect. |
how to check balun
With a current balun, you should have continuity from the feedline
conductors to the antenna conductors just as though the balun were a couple of pieces of wire connecting the feedline directly to the antenna. There shouldn't be any continuity from one side of the antenna or feedline to the other. A correctly operating voltage balun will show continuity between any pair of conductors, input to input, output to output, or input to output, just as though they were all shorted together inside. If there's an internal short where it shouldn't be, you won't be able to determine it with an ohmmeter. But you'd be able to see an open connection. You won't be able to tell a short-circuited current balun from a normally operating voltage balun with an ohmmeter, either. Using the balun as you are might cause its destruction. If the impedance seen at the input of the ladderline is very high (which is particularly possible if you're using the dipole on multiple bands), the voltage appearing across the balun might well be more than it's designed to handle. There are also likely to be common mode impedances on some bands that will be too high for the balun to be effective. Moving the balun to the antenna will change the bands where those conditions exist, but won't necessarily alleviate them -- assuming you're using the dipole on multiple bands, that is. You might consider taking a look at Cecil's web site for some alternatives. Roy Lewallen, W7EL RB wrote: Just put up a 140' dipole with 450 ohm ladderline feed. I'm using an unbalanced tuner with a Spi-Ro 1:1 balun on the output side of the tuner. The balun is one of those designed to be used right at the center feed point of the antenna, with coax as the feedline. I think it should work out fine being directly at the output of the tuner, with ladderline going up to the antenna. However, there is some disconnect between the rig and antenna. I suspect my balun may be bad internally. What's a good quick and dirty check with an ohmeter (don't know if these baluns are current or voltage types, so maybe include a checkout procedure for both kinds). I'm just starting to fault isolate. Since the balun is a new link in the chain from rig to antenna, it's my first suspect. |
how to check balun
Wow! Good info, Roy. Thanks. That should get me going, at least.
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how to check balun
Roy forgot to mention / stress that a balun is designed for specific
impedances. If it is a common 1:1 balun, then it is probably designed for 50 ohms. They are designed for feeding a 1/2 wave dipole or similar antenna, not widely different (from 50) impedances. Steve, K,9.D;C'I "RB" wrote in message ... Wow! Good info, Roy. Thanks. That should get me going, at least. |
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