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![]() "Steve N." wrote in message ... "Chuck Olson" wrote in message ... Today I clipped out the connection I had made at the bottom of the radiator, and the SWR bandwidth remained 2MHz as is was with the connection. The group of SWR measurements moved up an average of 150 KHz from my readings with the connection, but otherwise the performance of the "Slim Jim" configuration is identical. The length of the gap may now serve as a tuning mechanism, which wasn't a feature with the bottom connection, and the archives show some builders made good use of that facility. Thanks for spotting the similarity, Jeff. My 6M antenna will no doubt be better for it. 73, Chuck Chuck, I searched on Slim-Jim. Let me see if I understand correctly. Slim-Jim is a twin-lead or ladder-line type J antenna with the *top* of the half-wave (dual conductor) radiator ends connected. Yours has the bottom of the 1/2 wave ends connected. Yes, I conncted both top and bottom of the radiator to the previously floating wire, and when I removed the bottom connection, the SWR bandwidth remained as before, so the bottom connection does not appear to be necessary. The top connection is very easy, and evidently that's all you need, so no doubt about it - - it becomes a Slim-Jim. Am I to understand that the Slim-Jim configuration and yours have very similar SWR BW? Yes. This is good to know. Then I'd like clarification on your comment: "... If you analyze the operation of the very successful "Open Stub J-Pole" that Arrow makes, you will find they use the 0.95 FV for both the radiator and the stub,..." Can you be more specific about this. What is the electrical length of the stub for said analysis? I like that design, though there is controversy about it. I'm old fashioned, so I use an HP17BII calculator which has a "solve" function, and with the formula, LIN = 11811 / F(MHZ) / 4 x VF, given any two of LIN, FMHZ, and FV, I can obtain the third for a 1/4 wave stub. We find on the Arrow site http://www.arrowantennas.com/j-pole.html the longest element for operation at 146 MHz is 57.5", and the shorter element that makes the 1/4-wave stub is 19.25". With FMHZ = 146 and LIN = 19.25" we solve for VF of that shorter element and get 0.95 (which refers to the free space 1/4-wave as 1.00). Subtracting the 19.25 from 57.5 we get the radiator length of 38.25". Since that is a 1/2-wave length, we divide by 2 so we can use the 1/4-wave formula, and solving for VF we again get 0.95. I hope this helps. 73, Steve, K9DCi Best regards, Chuck, W6PKP |
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