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simple dipole for newbie - copper, alum, or galv steel pipe?
"Zombie Wolf" wrote in message ... "Dale Parfitt" wrote in message news:rMHOg.91$W13.22@trnddc05... "Zombie Wolf" wrote in message ... Make a Half - wave vertical with pipe. If the wall is dry wood, you can simply clamp it in place on the wall. You figure out the length of this antenna by the following formula 468 / freq (in MHZ) Hook the center conductor of the coax to the antenna, and then simply run a wire from the shield braid of the coax to a nearby ground. Presto. You now have a half - wave vertical. The end impedance of a half wave antenna is in the neighborhood of 1000--5000 Ohms depending on the diameter of the conductor; fatter conductors, lower Z The END impedance is not where you are making your connection. The impedance at the connection point on a half wave vertical is about 30 to 35 ohms. Not a perfect match , but certainly not 500 to 1 !. Connecting a coaxial cable to the bottom end of a half wave element and the shield to ground will then result in a V.S.W.R. of roughly 2500/50 or 500:1. You need to convert the feed Z to 5o Ohms either by: They didnt "convert" it when i ran a half wave whip on my car , and the shield was grounded to the chassis. I ran this for 15 years and never had an swr of over 1.5. My 40 meter vertical outside doesnt have an swr of 500, either, and it has worked well over the last 20 years. No stub matching is required in either case. Better tell this to the thousands of hams that have been running these antennas for the last 50 years ! No antenna matcher is needed, either (your lumped L or pi network). The formulas and the antenna itself came right out of the arrl handbook. So, you're telling me you have a 66' tall 40M vertical that is fed directly with coax? I would appreciate a model of the antenna in EZNEC or ELNEC or AO. In addition, the reference and year of the Handbook or any professional journal where it describes end feeding a half wave antenna directly with coaxial cable. Dale W4OP |
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