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#21
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Eric F. Richards wrote: Telamon wrote: Sorry, Telemon, but I disagree with you here. A stopped clock is right twice a day, and so it is with Dave here. I'm going to have to disagree with you there as I used to read David's posts and he was lucky to be right twice a month. True enough, but it's the same idea, different scale. I have high regard for Joe Carr and if anyone has a need they should buy one of his books. I'm not surprised your experience is good with a T2FD, it's a good design. There is a purpose behind the T2FD design and it is for transmit and receive. For people wanting to use it only for receive the additions to a basic folded dipole design so it will load well on transmit over a range of frequencies are not needed and will not help on receive. I'm not so sure I'm convinced by that, simply because of the amount of material I've read on the T2FD. Yes, it was designed as a transmit antenna, and yes, the resistor is vital to that role, but like in a rhombic or Beverage, it still plays an important role in reception. For receive only you are much better off using a BALUN of the right transformation depending on the basic shape of the folded dipole you construct. Unfortunately, I've no experience modelling the antenna, or I would do so to see if that's correct. Do you have a model to back up this assertion? I'm interested in seeing this result. I don't model antennas because as don't see the need. A folded dipole is well understood. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#22
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Telamon wrote:
I don't model antennas because as don't see the need. A folded dipole is well understood. But it's not a simple folded dipole. Somewhere I may have modelling data on the T2FD, but I have more pressing things to do today. But whatever -- I don't know why you feel the need to beat on the thing so much. The bottom line, for /me/, is that it works and works well. In /my/ situation, it far outperforms a well-designed end-fed wire. So my advice to the original poster is, go ahead and try it. For that matter, try slinky-dipoles, end-fed wires, whatever. See what works for you, and give it a run. The original poster can play games like using the resistor, opening that end of the dipole, shorting that end of the dipole, whatever. Let him decide what works best for him. -- Eric F. Richards "Nature abhors a vacuum tube." -- Myron Glass, often attributed to J. R. Pierce, Bell Labs, c. 1940 |
#23
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![]() On Nov 12, 9:56 am, David wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 14:23:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: I'd wonder how it would compare to an ordinary non-folded, non-terminated dipole, although that might not be a valid comparison, since a dipole is typically designed for a single frequency. Oh, well... - A dipole, as used by most SWLs, is unbalanced - and has no CMR. David can you expand on this comment ? * Dipole is Un-Balanced {As used by most SWLs} * Has no CMR. David what is CMR ? i want to know - iane ~ RHF |
#24
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On 14 Nov 2006 23:56:14 -0800, "RHF"
wrote: On Nov 12, 9:56 am, David wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 14:23:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: I'd wonder how it would compare to an ordinary non-folded, non-terminated dipole, although that might not be a valid comparison, since a dipole is typically designed for a single frequency. Oh, well... - A dipole, as used by most SWLs, is unbalanced - and has no CMR. David can you expand on this comment ? * Dipole is Un-Balanced {As used by most SWLs} * Has no CMR. David what is CMR ? i want to know - iane ~ RHF . . . . http://www.w8ji.com/common-mode_noise.htm |
#25
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![]() On Nov 15, 5:41 am, David wrote: On 14 Nov 2006 23:56:14 -0800, "RHF" wrote: On Nov 12, 9:56 am, David wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 14:23:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: I'd wonder how it would compare to an ordinary non-folded, non-terminated dipole, although that might not be a valid comparison, since a dipole is typically designed for a single frequency. Oh, well... - A dipole, as used by most SWLs, is unbalanced - and has no CMR. David can you expand on this comment ? * Dipole is Un-Balanced {As used by most SWLs} * Has no CMR. David what is CMR ? i want to know - iane ~ RHF . . . .http://www.w8ji.com/common-mode_noise.htm- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - David - Thank you ~ RHF That explains "CMN" Common Mode Noise ? Was CMR a typo ? |
#26
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On 15 Nov 2006 22:05:20 -0800, "RHF"
wrote: On Nov 15, 5:41 am, David wrote: On 14 Nov 2006 23:56:14 -0800, "RHF" wrote: On Nov 12, 9:56 am, David wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 14:23:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: I'd wonder how it would compare to an ordinary non-folded, non-terminated dipole, although that might not be a valid comparison, since a dipole is typically designed for a single frequency. Oh, well... - A dipole, as used by most SWLs, is unbalanced - and has no CMR. David can you expand on this comment ? * Dipole is Un-Balanced {As used by most SWLs} * Has no CMR. David what is CMR ? i want to know - iane ~ RHF . . . .http://www.w8ji.com/common-mode_noise.htm- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - David - Thank you ~ RHF That explains "CMN" Common Mode Noise ? Was CMR a typo ? . CMR is the ability of the system to balance out local (near field?) noise. |
#27
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![]() On Nov 16, 6:27 pm, David wrote: On 15 Nov 2006 22:05:20 -0800, "RHF" wrote: On Nov 15, 5:41 am, David wrote: On 14 Nov 2006 23:56:14 -0800, "RHF" wrote: On Nov 12, 9:56 am, David wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 14:23:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: I'd wonder how it would compare to an ordinary non-folded, non-terminated dipole, although that might not be a valid comparison, since a dipole is typically designed for a single frequency. Oh, well... - A dipole, as used by most SWLs, is unbalanced - and has no CMR. David can you expand on this comment ? * Dipole is Un-Balanced {As used by most SWLs} * Has no CMR. David what is CMR ? i want to know - iane ~ RHF . . . .http://www.w8ji.com/common-mode_noise.htm-Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - David - Thank you ~ RHF That explains "CMN" Common Mode Noise ? Was CMR a typo ? .CMR is the ability of the system to balance out local (near field?) noise.- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - David -?- "CMR" = Common Mode Rejection ~ RHF http://acronyms.thefreedictionary.co...Mode+Rejection http://www.edn.com/index.asp?layout=...850&ref=n bra http://www.benchmarkmedia.com/caig/html/caig04.html http://www.maxim-ic.com/appnotes.cfm...e_number/2045/ |
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