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On Dec 30, 9:37*pm, D Peter Maus wrote:
Brian wrote: I finally got a house out in the woods on five acres and I'm going to set up a couple of pretty long wires and my Wellbrook ALA-1530. I've pretty much decided on RG-6 for a couple of 150 ft. runs because the stuff's dirt cheap and I can pick it up at the local Home Depot. Is the impedance mismatch here going to be negligible, or should I just bite the bullet and go with RG-8 or a similar 50 ohm coax? -Brian - Alone, your receiver won't care. I doubt that the Wellbrook would, - either. - - * *As a complex, however, you're going to have not one mismatch, but - two. One at the output of the Wellbrook loop, and one at the input of - the antenna interface. This may result in standing waves on the - transmission line which, in turn may result in irregularities in - performance. - - * *With a reasonably well designed receiver, you'll likely not notice - any losses in practical listening. And unless you are working at the - very limits of performance on signals very far down in the noise and - doing A/B tests of one coax over another, you'll not detect the - performance irregularities. - DPM, Then it becomes a Practical Implementation and CBA type Problem. CBA = Cost Benefit Analysis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost-benefit_analysis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implementation Cost of RG58/RG8 Coax Cable -versus- Cost of RG6 Quad-Shield Coax Cable with a 75-to-50 Ohm Matching Transformer at each end. Starting with the Concept of a 9:1 Matching Transformer for General Broad-Band Shortwave Radio (High Frequency 3~30 MHz) Use and Application with 30 Turns (9-Side) and 10 Turns (1-Side) and the Same Ferrite Core Material : We now need a Matching Transformer to take the Antenna and Radios SO-239 Jack/Plugs {BNC Connector Optional} -to- the 75 Ohm Coax Cable with an F-Connector {BNC Connector Optional} . The 50 Ohm 10 Turns (1-Side) should be understood. Getting to the 75 Ohm (X-Side) should be simple Math : 75 / 50 = 1.5 Square Root of 1.5 = 1.225 Therefore the 75 Ohm (X-Side) would have 12 Turns. A 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformer would have 12 Turns (1.5-Side) and 10 Turns (1-Side) and the Same Ferrite Core Material -as- 9:1 Matching Transformer for General Broad Band Shortwave Radio (High Frequency 3~30 MHz) Use and Application. Anyone Else Have Any Ideas : On a Building Your Own {DIY} a 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformer ? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The Next Question Becomes : At What Cost ? * Are the 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformers commercial available ? - a Ready Made Item ? Price ? * Are the 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformers a Low Cost "Built-it-Yourself" Item ? - DIY Price ? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DPM - I go back to your first statement : "Alone, your receiver won't care. I doubt that the Wellbrook would, either." IMHO - For the vast majority of Shortwave Radio Listeners (SWLs) Practical Implementation Says : Just Do It ! - Use the RG6 Coax Cable -and- enjoy listening to your radios - iane ~ RHF |