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Dale Parfitt wrote:
In addition to the end Z varying radically with frequency, you will also find the classic 9:1 toroidal transformer only functions as a 9:1 over a relatively narrow frequency range- whereas a binocular core will behave as a 9:1 over almost 2 decades. Somewhere here I have a network analyzer plot comparing a toroidal vs binocular transformer. It depends a lot on the size of the transformer. You can get two decades from a tiny one made with a TV balun toroid. One trick is to keep the total length of wire in the transformer below about 5% of a wavelength at the highest frequency of interest. The antenna's Z does indeed vary a great deal, from 10's to 1000's of ohms. If you plot it in the complex plane, it makes a spiral centered at the antenna's *characteristic* Z, which for an inverted L is generally in the range of 300-700 ohms. Matching to an impedance near the center of the spiral yields a system that is not perfectly matched at any frequency, but is adequately matched over a wide range of frequencies. -jpd |
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