Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Richard, You hit this nail on the head, for su
All the issues you focus on are quite particular and specific, and perhaps too much so. I find them equally interesting and you ask reasonable questions. Unfortunately, you question above suffers from every problem imaginable for measuring, and any report you get without considerable qualification is probably sheer fancy. It suffers from a version of Heisenberg's problem of disturbing what you attempt to measure, and invalidating everything in the process. I don't have much trouble with the antennas I actually build. The aluminum and wire I sling around tend to behave. I do have some vested interest in overspecific modeling in the sense that since I'm deploying all my antennas from the balcony of my apartment (with its overhanging roof), and don't have much space to build, adjustments and pruning are very hard to do. Some performance gains can certainly be had by adjustment... but in my situation now it's so much easier to push bits around in EZNEC. This one, though, was just pure impractical theoretical curiosity. That, and a little bit of being concerned that people seemed to "know" the answer, that the answer was obvious, and, well, I didn't think it was. The current in real experiment would be, as you pointed out, pretty much impossible to measure without disturbing it. But as I see it, from a practical standpoint, in a real system where you're using the shield of a piece of coax as an antenna , the current in the center conductor never matters. The existence of the current matters, at least as a learning experience. It matters in the sense that some seem to think that there couldn't be a current, just because a piece of coax is "shielded". Or because the center conductor is "floating". It's precisely the fact that the center conductor is "floating" that makes the (probably) weak coupling at the ends important. Thanks for posting your results. What you describe certainly jives with the fuzzy idea that I've got of what's doing the coupling ... or at least where it's happening. Of course, the tube without center conductor is certainly a waveguide well below cutoff, so we've got solid footing saying a short wire inside a long conductive tube a small fraction of a wavelength in diameter will have little current on it... and the model also exhibits this. I'm done with this one unless I find a leadless current meter (small, battery powered with an A/D converter and optical fiber out?) and a big piece of copper pipe laying around! 73, Dan |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Grayland DXpedition Loggings - April 9-10, & Antenna Report | Shortwave | |||
OCSP DXpedition Loggings - Jan. 7 - 9 | Shortwave | |||
More MW DX logs from NJ with the 7600gr | Shortwave | |||
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? | Shortwave |