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You are telling us that you have evaluated the loss of a MFJ-989C
antenna tuner + open wire line vs coax by on air A/B tests using the S-meter as your indicator. Sure. Presumably you used exactly the same antenna, how are you sure that the feedline wasn't an active part of the antenna, was the measurement made over an ionospheric path, was the A/B comparison made at different times when other things may have changed? The A/B testing is instant. All comparisons were done in the usual up/down NVIS envionment. Mostly close in stations, and the noise floor as another opinion. Just comparing any difference in noise floor is a fairly accurate indication of efficiency in a case like that. I didn't worry about the feedline being part of the antenna, as I never would in the real world. I'm running ladder line the whole way from the tuner to the antenna. If the line is radiating, there would not be too much to do about it at that point, without going to further measures. . I noticed no obvious problems in tuning, or a "hot" line, rig, etc.. What would be your confidence limits on such a experiment? Very high overall. If you recorded your results, the variance would be revealing. No. Not that time. It was just for my personal amusement. In fact, I was out camping when I did that test. I suggest that the noise in your experiment would probably swamp the true difference between your A and B configuration, and therefore your conclusion might not be sound. What noise? I'm just using a switch to compare both antennas. In that particular case, when switching to the coax fed, the noise floor rose a bit, and strong signals that were way over S 9 rose about 5 db worth on that particular meter. Easily repeatable over and over. I'm not giving any numerical value to this increase, I just know the coax fed system was the most efficient. All signals increased when using coax. Noise floor, desired signals, the whole deal. Switching to the tuner/LL fed was like adding a small bit of attenuation. The way I see it, the loss had to be at the tuner. And I was very careful in tuning, using the least inductance to get a usable match. Your observation is (as you note) different to "on paper" expectations, that might be reason to re examine the experimental setup in search of an explanation. Why is it different? Actually, I found about what I was expecting. I was expecting the coax fed to win. And it did. Now, I realize this is a fairly sloppy test, and could be improved greatly for accuracy, but there was no doubt which system was better at that particular time. The "on paper" expectations of the ladder line winning would depend greatly on the losses of the tuner involved. Sure, ladder line on it's own is very low loss, but add a tuner, and things can change quite a bit as far as system loss. Now, granted the difference is small in general, but I could see it. And if I can see it on a meter, it's not as small as it's oft cracked up to be, or I wouldn't be able to see it. MK |