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On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 10:19:55 -0700, "Richard Henry"
wrote: Besides, they're not really robots. All of them are just RC toys. I'll be more impressed when they are autonomous. That's not entirely true these days. Autonomy in certain areas of control is becoming increasingly prevalent. It'll be interesting to see how this particular aspect of design develops over the coming years... -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
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If a s/steel antenna has slightly higher resistance, does that
appreciably lower its Q? I don't have any figures available but I wouldn't think so. The difference between the resistance of a 2-foot piece of copper and a 2-foot piece of stainless is going to be pretty small. |
If a s/steel antenna has slightly higher resistance, does that
appreciably lower its Q? I don't have any figures available but I wouldn't think so. The difference between the resistance of a 2-foot piece of copper and a 2-foot piece of stainless is going to be pretty small. |
The short answer is that stainless probably won't make a noticeable
difference in loss, and therefore won't make a significant difference in Q. The conductor loss of an antenna of a given wavelength size gets less as the frequency gets higher. That's because the antenna length decreases in inverse proportion to the frequency, while the loss per unit length increases only as the square root of the frequency. So for a given wire diameter, a half wavelength dipole at, say, 10 MHz has half the loss of a half wavelength dipole at 2.5 MHz. Stainless steel whips are fine at 2 meters. But an 80 meter dipole made from small or moderate gauge stainless wire could be pretty lossy -- almost certainly so, if the stainless is a magnetic alloy. (Being magnetic greatly increases the RF loss -- by a factor of the square root of the permeability.) Loss becomes very important when a whip is a lot shorter than a quarter wavelength. However, in many or most cases (like an HF mobile whip), the whip typically has a fairly large diameter where the current is high, and the whip loss is swamped by other losses, so the whip loss isn't objectionable. It's always possible to come up with a combination of whip diameter, length, and frequency where stainless could be a poor choice -- but it's uncommon in typical applications. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Paul Burridge wrote: On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 11:40:55 -0400, "Bob Lewis \(AA4PB\)" wrote: Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a very efficient antenna. I doubt that the difference in resistance between stainless and copper is going to cause any significant additional losses in a whip antenna. That difference will be small compared to the other losses. Stainless is often used for whip antennas because of its mechanical properties. Yes, I've several proprietory s/steel whip antennas that give excellent results. But a question springs to mind. If a s/steel antenna has slightly higher resistance, does that appreciably lower its Q? -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
The short answer is that stainless probably won't make a noticeable
difference in loss, and therefore won't make a significant difference in Q. The conductor loss of an antenna of a given wavelength size gets less as the frequency gets higher. That's because the antenna length decreases in inverse proportion to the frequency, while the loss per unit length increases only as the square root of the frequency. So for a given wire diameter, a half wavelength dipole at, say, 10 MHz has half the loss of a half wavelength dipole at 2.5 MHz. Stainless steel whips are fine at 2 meters. But an 80 meter dipole made from small or moderate gauge stainless wire could be pretty lossy -- almost certainly so, if the stainless is a magnetic alloy. (Being magnetic greatly increases the RF loss -- by a factor of the square root of the permeability.) Loss becomes very important when a whip is a lot shorter than a quarter wavelength. However, in many or most cases (like an HF mobile whip), the whip typically has a fairly large diameter where the current is high, and the whip loss is swamped by other losses, so the whip loss isn't objectionable. It's always possible to come up with a combination of whip diameter, length, and frequency where stainless could be a poor choice -- but it's uncommon in typical applications. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Paul Burridge wrote: On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 11:40:55 -0400, "Bob Lewis \(AA4PB\)" wrote: Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a very efficient antenna. I doubt that the difference in resistance between stainless and copper is going to cause any significant additional losses in a whip antenna. That difference will be small compared to the other losses. Stainless is often used for whip antennas because of its mechanical properties. Yes, I've several proprietory s/steel whip antennas that give excellent results. But a question springs to mind. If a s/steel antenna has slightly higher resistance, does that appreciably lower its Q? -- "I believe history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill |
surface armor, there's a hulking great metal framework. Consequently,
sandwiching the antenna between the armour and the frame is going to lead to unacceptable loss of radiated energy, I'd have thought. Unless anyone knows differently.. I do not know the frequencies, but if they are high enough, one could think of a slot or a patch antenna Is there anything in the rules forbidding your installing a jammer If jamming would be allowed, it would be a totally different sport (but interesting as well). In that case you may as well omit the robots See all the military history about ECM, ECCM, ECCCM (Electronic Counter(*n) Measures) etc. Wim |
surface armor, there's a hulking great metal framework. Consequently,
sandwiching the antenna between the armour and the frame is going to lead to unacceptable loss of radiated energy, I'd have thought. Unless anyone knows differently.. I do not know the frequencies, but if they are high enough, one could think of a slot or a patch antenna Is there anything in the rules forbidding your installing a jammer If jamming would be allowed, it would be a totally different sport (but interesting as well). In that case you may as well omit the robots See all the military history about ECM, ECCM, ECCCM (Electronic Counter(*n) Measures) etc. Wim |
Stainless steel is awful at conducting electricity - so it won't make a
very efficient antenna. But how much it really matters, I don't know. You can coat it with silver or copper, only the outer few microns conduct HF (skin-effect) Wim |
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