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In article ,
Telamon wrote: In article , starman [snip] Are all inverted-L's, random wires? Depends on how you connect it to the radio. With just a single vertical lead-in then yes but use a coax grounded in some way then no. Another thing to consider is that the vertical portion should be a significant portion of the antenna to qualify as an inverted L. An antenna that is 15 feet high and 150 feet long the vertical portion is only 10% of the total pickup area. I would consider that to be a horizontal random/long wire. -- Telamon Ventura, California Nothing about antenna theory seems to ever be simple. The antenna you describe, above about 15MHz, will have a horizontal pattern quite different from a 150 foot horizontal wire. The horizontal wire will have a horizontal pattern like the petals of a warped daisy flower, with many lobes separated by deep nulls, some more than 40dB 'deep'. That vertical section of the above-described inverted-L will do quite a bit to fill in those nulls. Also, the inverted-L is simple to ground. Electromagnetic theory does not require such a ground, but your friendly local Electrical Code does. Not saying you're wrong, Telamon; below 10 MHz, you're basically right. Just saying that we SW & scanner types work with wavelengths from about one mile down to about a foot, and it's hard to find rules or principles that apply uniformly across the whole range. -- R F Wieland Newark, DE 19711-5323 USA 39.68N 75.74W Icom R75 Heathkit GR-81 Inverted-L in the attic Reply to wieland at me dot udel dot edu |
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