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This is a distillation of several recent postings and other readily
available information on securing a good RF "ground" for a vertical antenna on a plastic or wood sailboat. The basis for each method was either reported model results or a presumed "organizational authority" on the subject (i.e., ARRL, Icom, and SGC). No ranking or recommendation was intended. If anyone spots any errors of fact or significant omissions, I'd welcome appropriate "recalibration". Thanks in advance. 1) Grounding plates Will not work if submerged as much as four feet, but will work as near-perfect if at the waterline, and may work if attached to hull even when submerged four feet (awaiting clarification from Roy, W7EL). In fresh water or low-conductivity water, a ground plate may not function acceptably. Sometimes used in combination with #4 below. Recommended only "as a last resort" by Icom. 2) Wire in water A one-foot length of wire immersed near water surface is sufficient for near-perfect results based on W7EL's NEC-4 model results. Assumed performance is similar to grounding plate. 3) Radials Even shortened (loaded) radials elevated over seawater work as near-perfect based on N6LF's NEC-4 modeling. Objections to radials are safety (high-voltage insulation notwithstanding), tripping hazard, undesirable RF coupling, and the necessity of either tuning the radial(s) or installing multiple 1/4 wavelength wires. Radials will be useful even over fresh water or when boat is on land. Single radials can provide significant near-vertical radiation which may be useful, but at the cost of reduced radiation from the vertical radiator. Considered a viable alternative by Icom but not recommended by ARRL. 4) Counterpoise (i.e., mast, forestay, shrouds, lifelines, engine, metal tanks, 100 square feet of copper, keel, rudder, etc. bonded together) One of the traditional approaches to marine SSB installations on plastic and wood sailboats. The mast and rigging often provide the equivalent of ~200 lineal feet of counterpoise wire above deck with additional metal structures connected on and below deck. Sometimes used in combination with a grounding plate. If copper is placed inside hull below waterline, useful capacitive coupling to the water may occur. Will work over fresh water and on land. This is the method recommended in the ARRL Antenna Book, where radials, as the only considered alternative, are discouraged in their discussion for the reasons stated in #3. This type of counterpoise is also the approach recommended by both Icom and SGC. 5) OCF dipole w/horizontal component along deck Not commonly used, but obviates the need for multiple resonant radials. Analyzed by W4RNL. Usually requires a current choke in the coax from tuner to rig to reduce undesired RF coupling. Suffers from some of the same objections listed for radials; will also provide some near-vertical radiation. Will work over fresh water and on land. Is that where it stands, folks? 73, Chuck, NT3G ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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