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Hello Chad:
Wow good point here you have made. Yes I agree with you here, the mast would become the counter poise, if currents are choked at the coax. This is why these none ground plane antennas will still work when a coax Balun is placed right at the antennas connector, a Great point made here. In the 1980's I had a terrible time installing a Sigma 4 antenna. As the mast was pushed up the SWR changed. So I figured some how the mast and maybe the coax, was apart of the antenna, and dropped the mast down a foot at a time to get a decent SWR. I wish I had a Balun then. Placing the balun down the coax at a 1/4 wavelength might work well on a fiberglass boat and such. One of the things while adding such things and testing them, is to keep an eye on the field strength of the antenna. If something is done and the field strength increases or decreases you want to see this. In some cases antenna ranges will monitor the antennas swr as compared to its field strength. Jay in the Mojave Chad Wahls wrote: "Jay in the Mojave" wrote in message ... Hello Dr Death: Ok good deal I saw the impressive photos that Chad had there. One thing to consider is that those fiberglass none ground plane antennas use the coax outer shield as the counter poise or other end of the antenna, so current will be seen on the coax. And in some case you will see SWR changes from different lengths of coax, because the coax is actually radiating, acting like a antenna. I have had customers add in a line coax Balun on these type of antennas. The Balun uses a Toroid Core, with the coax would around it. But the trick here is that the Toroid Core is placed at 1/4 wavelength or about 102 inches down from the antennas connector. This allows the coax to radiate for a 1/4 wavelength, possibility allowing for a low take off angle, then choking off the currents beyond the 1/4 wavelength. Or the coil wound coax Balun can be tried. As you may have guessed the antenna is an Imax 2000. Which mounts to the mast via a metal base that is directly coupled to the mast/tower. This being said wouldn't the mast become the counterpoise at this point if the coax is not? (The outside of the PL259 is directly coupled to the mounting provisions.) The balun was made out of spare junk on the premise that I NEEDED a reason to go out to the shop, drink some beer and relax. What a better project, a free one ![]() Jay's points a couple times when they were brought up after construction of said device. This spring I hope to have a new (different) tower and at this time will play with moving the balun from the feed point to right before the ground rod next to the house. This will allow the coax to act as it should and hopefully keep my feedline currents down, wadda ya think? |
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