Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Cecil Moore wrote:
Tom Donaly wrote: When are you guys going to do your own experiments and measurements. I've already done them and reported them here, Tom. Here's the procedure again. 1. Take a sample coil and measure the 1/4WL self resonant frequency over my GMC pickup ground plane. 2. Keeping everything else the same, cut off half of the above coil. 3. Add enough straight wire as a stinger to bring the antenna system back to resonance at the previous self- resonant frequency. 4. The delay through half the coil at the self resonant frequency of the whole coil, is known to be 45 degrees. The stinger is 11 degrees long. The impedance discontinuity between the coil and the stinger provides the other 34 degrees of phase shift. Both sides of the argument assumed only two phase shifts were involved. Both sides were wrong. The third phase shift is obvious once you know it exists and is perfectly visible on a Smith Chart. When the impedance at Z01 is 1.0 on the Smith Chart and transforms to 9.0 on the Smith Chart for Z02, that's obviously a large phase shift. Two years ago, both sides agreed that the stinger was about 11 degrees of the antenna. 1. Side 1 said that the base loading coil acted as a purely lumped inductance providing 79 degrees of phase shift essentially at a point. 2. Side 2 said that the base loading coil provided a 79 degree delay like the delay in a transmission line, which was the source of the 79 degree phase shift. At that time, both sides were unaware of the phase shift occuring at the impedance discontinuity point. Now we know that both sides were partially right and partially wrong. As side 1 said, there is an abrupt phase shift at a point. As side 2 said, there is a delay through the coil. The truth seems to be just about in the middle of the two previous arguments which should make both sides happy. There are tens of degrees of delay through the coil. There are tens of degrees of abrupt phase shift at the coil to stinger impedance discontinuity. Both sides were equally right and equally wrong. Who won? Both sides. Who lost? Both sides. This is the invariable result when both sides are forced off the rails by reality. The only problem with that, Cecil, is that in neither the coil nor the inductor do you have a uniform Z0. Since the capacitance per unit length is a variable, so is Z0 which is dependant on it. You've been sucked into Reg's practice of assuming an average Z0 in order to do calculations, but in your case it won't work because you have to posit two distinct Z0s to have your impedance boundary. In actuality, there's a constant change in Z0 up and down both the stinger and the coil so your idea is a bust. By the way, if you or the Corum boys really want a transmission line resonator for your antenna/Teslacoils you should switch to a helical resonator, the kind ensconced in a can. Of course, the sparks will be disappointing, but the theory will work better. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |