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After doing a lot of reading on the web about long wires, short wires,
inverted L's, impedance matching, baluns, ununs, onions, fundip, and who knows what else... I was thinking (run for cover please) Couldn't one simply use a small active device to buffer the straight wire antenna at the end where it tethers to Ye Olde Oak tree or whatever it's tied to? I was thinking you could even make it powered with a small gel cell or something and a solar cell to power it. Some sort of wide-band amplifier that would have a suitably high input impedance to accomodate the higher and varying impedance of the wire over the desired frequency range, and yet having a fixed 75 or 50 ohm output impedance to drive the coax that runs back to the house. Then you could use a transformer in the house at the receiver if it's the type that wants to be fed from a high-impedance. I would think this would get around the problem of an impedance matching transformer mismatching the antenna on frequncies where the antenna impedance drops significantly. Also it could provide perhaps some minimal gain to boot. Some of those commercial impedance matching transformers sell for over $50 US. So I would think a small buffer amp might not be too cost-ineffective. Dave |
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