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Sure Paul. It is as a transmitting antenna for short-range only. Do you know
about: http://www.ancom.no/ products? They claim their ferrite rod styled antenna works as good transmitter. See their patent application. regards - Henry "Paul Keinanen" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... On Fri, 6 Oct 2006 17:24:40 +0200, "Henry Kiefer" wrote: You can use ferrit antenna rods. That works for receivers very fine in VLF band and for transmitters too - as long as the ferrit won't go into saturation. That is a magnetic antenna and it is much shorter than the equivalent mentioned. Ferrite rod antennas with perhaps -50 to -60 dB gain are useful since the extremely high band noise at VLF. It does not matter very much if both the wanted signal and the band noise is attenuated by 60 dB, as long as the wanted signal at the antenna terminals is stronger than the preamplifier thermal noise. For transmitting, such antenna would be ridiculous. In order to get 1 W EiRP as allowed on the 135 kHz amateur band in many countries, you would have to feed 1 MW into an antenna with -60 dB gain. The ferrite rod would saturate at much lower power levels such as 1 W or a few mW. Most likely you might get a few nW radiated power without saturating the rod. Paul OH3LWR |