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#11
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Might I suggest electric fence wire, a 1/4 mile spool is under $8.00. 19 AWG
and designed for outdoor use. I have used cage dipoles for years and it has worked well for me. I normally use 6 wires and slices of 12" diameter plastic sewer pipe cut to 1/4 inch thickness and 6 holes drilled every 60 degrees(slightly larger than your wire). on 80 meters I use 4 rings per side equally spaced. the rings are held in place by winding a short piece of wire around the plastic and twisting it on each side of the ring to the antenna element. "SpamLover" wrote in message om... Right! the big improvement in broadbanding seems to be going from 1 to 2-3 wires. Rather, from 1 to a lot of wires OR to 2 or 3 THICK self supporting masts. More wires, smoother passband. Less wires, more mismatches. I have checked a couple of things: 1) Land based cage monopoles. Typically: - height: .24 lambda at the lowest frequency - max diameter: .18 lambda at almost half height - up to 24 / 36 wires - ground plane with at least 24 wires - bandwidth easily 7:1 2) Pix of dipoles spotted atop Russian embassies, eyeballed based on height of balcony railings - 6 conductors - spacers approx. 1 m diameter, every 3 m - poles typically 10-12 m each If you No free lunches at the Maxwell Cafe. Whence the success of the Maxwell House brand. http://www.eznec.com/ No free lunch there either. The demo only does 20 elements. If I did an 8-wire cage in decent sized diameter stainless steel rope, it would set me back in the 100s at my local prices, so I might as well buy the SW and learn to use it. The copperclad steel MIG continuous welding wire I was testing has rusted in ONE NIGHT under the fall rain. I'll look for a source of stainless welding wire. I have a single wire sloper up for the last 4 years and it looks absolutely new - courtesy of the head of mechanical maintenance at a cement factory I did consulting at. |
#12
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Reg, in A/B tests with a standard dipole, the cage was "quieter". That is, I
am able to hear weaker signals with less noise. Anecdotal at best, but keeps me using one. I am under 2:1 from 3575 to 3925 with no tuner. I suspect that if I were using copper Vs the fence wire the Q would be higher and the results more in agreement with your cage program. Besides it gives me a warm fuzzy feeling and impresses the neighbors. "Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... The only difference in performance between a cage antenna and an ordinary thin-wire dipole is a modest increase in bandwidth. There is no increase in radiating/receiving efficience. The increase in bandwidth is much less than is popularly supposed and may not be considered worth the extra construction costs and inconvenience. To predict resonant frequency, bandwidth and a few other characteristics from overall length, number of cage wires from 1 to N, and wire diameter, download program DIPCAGE from website below. Download DIPCAGE in a few seconds, no unzipping inconvenience, run immediately. ---- ======================= Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.g4fgq.com ======================= |
#13
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Go here
rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors good luck "SpamLover" wrote in message m... Goal: * Minimum fuss 3-30MHz operation, mostly on 5-15MHz. * Will use step-dowm RF transformer between antenna and low impedance coax * May use autotuner on TX * Like the wirecage antennas still today seen on many a military vessel. Available on roof: - 25ft steel structure (like piramid base for power line) - about 100 feet space in one direction -...to abandoned flue chimney, 100ft away and 10 feet lower than base of steel structure - roof covered with alu plates on tar (could be all arc welded together, perhaps. THIS LOOKS PRETTY MUCH LIKE A SHIP TO ME cept its' 120ft aboveground. I want to build a wire cage monopole - sloping down from steel tower - using tower as counterpoise - feedpoint at top of sloper, via stepdown rf transfomrer, grounded to tower - coax cable lead, with rf choke coils and surge suppressors. Questions: - what kind of cage antenna? - how many wires? - what spreaders, how large? - ideal wire? Current plan config: - length 14 m = 2 x 4m straight sections, + 2 x 3m truncated cubes - spreaders at 3-7-11 m - 140 cm dia. spreaders, each made with two waterproofed bamboo triangles in "star of David" configuration; wire kept parallel at 70cm distance from each orther. - material: .8mm copperclad, abt. 90 m (270 ft) total. Any hints, like more/fewer parallel wires, broader / smaller spreaders, different materials, dirrerent antenna wire, RF downtransformer, whatever? Filippo |
#14
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Dear W4JLE
I think you should be aware that, as perceived at the receiver end, the characteristics of the feedline, its length and SWR, and tuner can have at least as great an effect on operating bandwidth as the antenna constuction itself. Antenna height above ground can seriously affect bandwidth. Lowering height can increase bandwidth more than changing from from a thin wire to big fat cage. There's far too much attention paid to the subject of wire diameter by the gurus who have heard a rumour that wire diameter increases bandwidth and can't resist repeating the story on every possible occasion. I produced the program to put the matter into quantitative perspective. As for a fat antenna's remarkable ability to distinguish favourably between signals and noise I can suggest only that your A-B tests were not quite what you thought they were. Displacement, orientation, noise in a null, different receiver? With MY neighbours the only warm fuzzy feelings have to be alcohol-assisted. --- Reg ==================================== "w4jle" W4JLE(remove this to wrote in message ... Reg, in A/B tests with a standard dipole, the cage was "quieter". That is, I am able to hear weaker signals with less noise. Anecdotal at best, but keeps me using one. I am under 2:1 from 3575 to 3925 with no tuner. I suspect that if I were using copper Vs the fence wire the Q would be higher and the results more in agreement with your cage program. Besides it gives me a warm fuzzy feeling and impresses the neighbors. "Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... The only difference in performance between a cage antenna and an ordinary thin-wire dipole is a modest increase in bandwidth. There is no increase in radiating/receiving efficience. The increase in bandwidth is much less than is popularly supposed and may not be considered worth the extra construction costs and inconvenience. To predict resonant frequency, bandwidth and a few other characteristics from overall length, number of cage wires from 1 to N, and wire diameter, download program DIPCAGE from website below. Download DIPCAGE in a few seconds, no unzipping inconvenience, run immediately. ---- ======================= Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.g4fgq.com ======================= |
#16
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What kind of bandwidth do you get with that?
Bob AD3K w4jle wrote: Might I suggest electric fence wire, a 1/4 mile spool is under $8.00. 19 AWG and designed for outdoor use. I have used cage dipoles for years and it has worked well for me. I normally use 6 wires and slices of 12" diameter plastic sewer pipe cut to 1/4 inch thickness and 6 holes drilled every 60 degrees(slightly larger than your wire). on 80 meters I use 4 rings per side equally spaced. the rings are held in place by winding a short piece of wire around the plastic and twisting it on each side of the ring to the antenna element. |
#17
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Thus the reason they make chocolate and vanilla, we all get a choice.
I choose the cage, don't confuse me with the facts. "Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... Dear W4JLE I think you should be aware that, as perceived at the receiver end, the characteristics of the feedline, its length and SWR, and tuner can have at least as great an effect on operating bandwidth as the antenna constuction itself. Antenna height above ground can seriously affect bandwidth. Lowering height can increase bandwidth more than changing from from a thin wire to big fat cage. |
#18
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Thank you all again for the deluge of tips & links!
This is getting seriously fun! Quick update on my trials with copperclad (maybe just copperflashed) metal-inert-gas continuous welding steelwi - This stuff solders like heaven! Steel disperses heat less than copper, and capillarity is amazing. Hot solder joints catch deep between twisted wires. - Steel is quite springy and retains shape. My spool is small (~5" dia.) but if I release the wire it falls into 15" loops. - I made a 20' dia. loop with 3+ rounds of this wire, and soldered it at 6 spots all round. Very light and elastic. You know where I'm heading. I would like to try a lightweight soldered all-steel cage, and rustproof it with one of those steel-blackening nitric acid paints. As a trial, I'd do a short cage with two 20" rings, maybe 2' between them, and 3' end cones, paint it all, and hang it out in the elements, weight-loaded. The INEVITABLE QUESTION === Do cage spreaders HAVE to be insulating? === Uneducated guess: as VHF/UHF discones are made out of either radials or sheet metal, I'd say that shorting spacers should be OK. |
#19
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SL,
For a Cage Antenna 'using' Metal (conductive) "Spacers" for VHF and UHF just may work. But... Everything I have seen for HF (MW/SW) has non-conductive spacers. - - - wood, plastic, tie-off-ropes, etc. * * * Here is an alternative idea: Three-Five small 24" Hula-Hoops with 8-12 holes drilled into them for the copperclad wire. Would be a quick and easy trial (proto-type) model. - Three to Five Feet (3Ft-5Ft) Top and Bottom "Cones". - - Three to Five Feet (3Ft-5Ft) "Space" between the Hula-Hoops. - - - Eight to Twelve (8-12) Wires 12Ft-30Ft Long. - - - - Vertically Mounted with a Bottom Feed Point. Note: Flexiable 1/2", 3/4" or 1" Black PVC Tubing that is designed for Garden Watering Systems. Could be used for smaller circular "Spacer" Loops. Form them to size and use a Wood Plug and Stapes to join the ends. Then Drill the holes for the wires. TIP: Simple Practial Considerations - - - The "Rule-of-Thumb" in dealing with Mechanical Realities ![]() * Divide the Diameter of the Loops by Two(2) to 'determine' the maximum "Number" of Wires that will fit around the perimeter of the Loop. * Multiply the Diameter by Five(5) to determine the appropriate "Space" between the Loops. EXAMPLES: 6" Loop = Three(3) Wires and Two Foot Spacing between the Loops. 8" Loop = Four(4) Wires and Three Foot Spacing between the Loops. 12" Loop = Six(6) Wires and Five Foot Spacing between the Loops. 16" Loop = Eight(8) Wires and Seven Foot Spacing between the Loops. 18" Loop = Nine(9) Wires and Eight Foot Spacing between the Loops. 20" Loop = Ten(6) Wires and Nine Foot Spacing between the Loops. 24" Loop = Twelve(12) Wires and Ten Foot Spacing between the Loops. iane ~ RHF .. .. OBTW: Visit the "SWL Antennas and AM & FM Antennas" which is "Open-To-All" to Read and Post at YAHOO! eGroups. GoTo= http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SWL-AM-FM-Antenna/ - - - This is my Antenna ~Golbewym~ [My Web Log]. .. .. = = (SpamLover) = = = wrote in message . com... Thank you all again for the deluge of tips & links! This is getting seriously fun! Quick update on my trials with copperclad (maybe just copperflashed) metal-inert-gas continuous welding steelwi - This stuff solders like heaven! Steel disperses heat less than copper, and capillarity is amazing. Hot solder joints catch deep between twisted wires. - Steel is quite springy and retains shape. My spool is small (~5" dia.) but if I release the wire it falls into 15" loops. - I made a 20' dia. loop with 3+ rounds of this wire, and soldered it at 6 spots all round. Very light and elastic. You know where I'm heading. I would like to try a lightweight soldered all-steel cage, and rustproof it with one of those steel-blackening nitric acid paints. As a trial, I'd do a short cage with two 20" rings, maybe 2' between them, and 3' end cones, paint it all, and hang it out in the elements, weight-loaded. The INEVITABLE QUESTION === Do cage spreaders HAVE to be insulating? === Uneducated guess: as VHF/UHF discones are made out of either radials or sheet metal, I'd say that shorting spacers should be OK. |
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