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On Sep 28, 9:29?am, Michael Coslo wrote:
wrote: On Sep 27, 10:53?am, Michael Coslo wrote: Why not, [use a 1/4 wave dipole] other than the fact that such a short dipole will present a feedpoint impedance that has a low resistive part and a high reactive part? That's a pretty good reason, though. 1/4 wavelength dipoles - make sure to read that as total antenna length, not 1/4 wavelength per leg, are just a troublesome combination that a lot of tuners can't tune very well. I'm not convinced. Depending on the transmission line impedance and length, the shack-end Z could be within the matching range of the Transmatch. I don't consider the G5RV and OCF to be 'trick' antennas. They're simply intelligent combinations of dipole and feed systems that have been worked out to present reasonable impedances so that line losses and Transmatch requirements are reasonable. They are very clever. The OCF especially is a joyful playground to work on with antenna design programs. It is a great way to learn both the programs and antenna theory. Agreed. But so are other implementations such as trap dipoles and the classic dipole-with-ladder-line feed, where you try different dipole and transmission-line lengths. Often the idea of "low SWR" is put out as if it is the sole criteria. Too often. In defense of SWR lovers, modern Rigs really hate High SWR, especially reactance of the capacitive kind. Well, that depends on how you define 'modern'... But a 50 ohm resistor has 1.1:1 VSWR, and some manufacturers have taken advantage of that sort of thing in the past. Not just in the past. Google "Maxx-comm matcher" (try different spellings). Those folks are still in business. The problem as I see it is that most new folks these days start out with an "all band" radio, and are inclined to want a antenna that is likewise all band. Which may or may not be a good idea. If the only bands that are open when you have time to operate are ones where your antenna works poorly, the result is going to be frustration. A lot of Western and Eastern EU, Great Britain, Iceland, Norway, most of South/Central America, about half of Africa, Israel, Australia, Antarctica, and a couple others. On which bands? No JA or far eastern countries, but I haven't tried really hard, I just work 'em if I happen to hear them. Of course from EPA, VK-land is about the antipodes. I once accidentally worked a fair part of a contest once on 75 meters on probably around 3 watts, mostly into California - I had tuned the antenna, and forgot to turn the power back up. I had works around 25 QSO's before catching that one. Situational awareness, that's all. With my rig, the power level is pretty obvious. Of course, that isn't quantified data, it's just anecdotal. But running at QRP levels does make for a more stern test of an antenna's abilities, especially if there isn't obvious signs of it, such as not getting calls answered. Sold me on the thing. The Ultimate Test is "what have you worked on it?" Theory is great but the real proof is in the QSOs. The technical details are that it is a 96 foot total length dipole, up around 55 feet, the center support is a short length of pvc tubing. I suspect that the 96 foot length was decided because that's what would fit in the available space. The ladder line is soldered to the respective dipole wire. Ladder line makes an almost straight drop to the Shack window. Definitely not the best thing going, but not too bad. Actually, what you describe is pretty close to optimum for a simple multiband antenna system in limited space, which I suspect is the main issue. Are you using true ladder line, or "window line" (Twin Lead with holes punched in the insulation)? True ladder line (heavy wire, wide spacing, mostly air insulation) has lower loss and less weather effects. If the line is short there's not much difference, but as frequency and line length increaseit can be worth changing out. Depending on the shack-end impedances, different Transmatches can have more or less loss. The worst-case scenario is where a 4:1 balun is used with a shack-end impedance that has low resistive and high reactive values. The poor Transmatch has to try to deal with one quarter of the resistive part! 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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