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On Tue, 10 Jan 2006 15:25:35 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote:
Amos Keag wrote: A resonant rhombic without a termination resistor is bidirectional. It may be bidirectional, but it still has directivity in the direction away from the feed. Yes and, being open-ended, is a *standing-wave* antenna. Contrary to what has been said here on r.r.a.a in the past, Balanis says: "The current and voltage distributions on open-ended antennas are similar to the standing wave patterns on open-ended transmission lines. ... Standing wave antennas, such as the dipole, can be analyzed as traveling wave antennas with waves propagating in opposite directions (forward and backward) and represented by traveling wave currents If and Ib in Figure 10.1(a)." If the unterminated rhombic is long enough to be considered a -real- rhombic, it is both a standing wave and a traveling wave antenna. If you want to think of it in transmission line terms, it's a very lossy line. The 100% reflection at the open end is 100% of what's left after the effects of resistive and radiated loss are factored in. The rhombic as the positive attribute of simplicity but that is about the only positive. It takes a huge amount of space (in wavelengths) and it's really a crappy antenna from the standpoint of minor (and some not so minor) lobes. The Laport version is much better, but much more complicated. |
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