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"Richard Clark" wrote
This must be a convention that is particular to only a very few Hams. The FCC database describes AM antennas in both electrical and physical height as follows. .... it would seem odd to step out of this expectation to change to calling all antennas 90° simply because they resonate. _____________ The FCC data cited does not include the reduced velocity of propagation along the radiator -- which means that an FCC "90 degree" radiator is not resonant, it has some inductive reactance. A network is used at the radiator feedpoint to transform the complex impedance there to properly match the transmission line. That "90 degree" radiator would need to be shortened by several percent in order to be self-resonant. Kraus (3rd Ed, p 182) shows a feedpoint Z of 73 + j42.5 ohms for a thin-wire, linear dipole that is a physical 1/2-wavelength, and that self-resonance occurs at a length a few percent shorter, when the radiation resistance drops to about 65 ohms. An unloaded 1/4-wave MW broadcast monopole working against the typical broadcast radial ground system has about 1/2 the impedance that Kraus shows for a dipole in free space. RF |
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