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On Thu, 19 Jan 2006 21:22:25 -0600, "David G. Nagel"
wrote: Owen; Given the expertise that Bill has accumulated over the years and the good advise he has given to anyone who asks I think that your attitude needs modification. When you were in school did you challenge your teachers this way? I think not. If you diagreed you kept it to your self or checked it out on your own. Dave, I don't agree, I have never had a teacher worth his salt who responded to polite questions as Bill did. No, I don't believe something just because I read it on the 'net, I would like to know why. For what it's worth everything that I have read tends towards placing the radials on the open ground, usually staked down so as to prevent tripping or getting caught in a lawn mower. Yes, I see lots of web articles describing that in ham stations, but it is not the only approach that I see documented and talked about. In my limited experience, I have not seen commercial HF installations with radial / ground wires laid above ground in preference to being buried. The only cases I can recall were because of rock. Whilst there are articles around about the performance of shallow buried radials, I have not seen any that deal quantitatively with radials laid on the ground, or pinned to the ground as you describe, and the effects of those different installations on antenna efficiency. That is what I was asking about. Equally, there a plenty of articles where the author insists that radials cannot work near the ground and they need to be some distance above, some stating a quarter wave above. They can't all have "better" efficiency, the only way to know is to seek reasons why a configuration is better. Bill proposed a "better" configuration and declined to explain why / how it is better. Owen -- |
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