Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Jack Painter wrote: "starman" wrote A low noise inverted-L will have the vertical downlead at the far end of the horizontal section with the balun located at the lower end of the single wire downlead, near the ground. Then you can run coax back to the house from the balun. The near end of the horizontal section shouldn't be too close to the house where it might pick up noise. The 'low noise inverted-L' (paragraph above) can make a big difference in lowering the noise that the antenna picks up from local sources. There is not one ounce of truth to an "Inverted-L" being ANY quieter than a 45 degree random wire, and especially a horizontal-dipole, which is generally quieter than any antenna with a vertical component. Most interference is vertically polarized, and the verticals, random-wires, slopers, or inverted-L antenna designs all pick up more vertically polarized "noise" than a horizontally polarized antenna. Adding a vertical or even a 45 degree sloped component to an antenna DOES make it less directional than a horizontal, and that is all it does. Any noise-limiting realized from these designs comes strictly from the grounded-Balun and not the design, configuration or dimensions of the antenna. Shield-grounding (for static and lightning protection) at the feedpoint will achieve 99% of the noise-limiting benefit that a grounded Balun does. The missing 1% is an equal loss of signal and noise through the Balun. All RF noise (but not all energy has RF components) is coupled right across the Balun windings, their function of electrically decoupling is true of some DC energy, but not RF energy, which is rather efficiently coupled across the Balun by design. The same application of a grounded-Balun works equally well on both the random (straight) wire antennas and inverted-L antenna btw. Both the random wire and inverted-L benefit from (require in most cases) a counterpoise ground or radials to provide effective transmitting. Neither a counterpoise nor radials affect reception from the either the random wire or inverted-L, however. I think you've missed the point. A so called 'low noise' inverted-L is intended to reduce noise on the feed line to the receiver which comes from domestic sources like appliances in the home. This is not the same as the noise being received by the antenna wire itself. When the feed line is part of the vertical section of the antenna, like the typical inverted-L or random wire, it can pick up noise from the domestic environment. The solution is to use a coax feed line which connects to a balun near the ground. The vertical section of the antenna comes down to the balun. This allows for a short RF ground from the coax shield to earth which decouples the noise on the shield. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. | Antenna | |||
The "TRICK" to TV 'type' Coax Cable [Shielded] SWL Loop Antennas {RHF} | Antenna | |||
Log antenna mounting questions | Antenna | |||
LongWire Antenna | Shortwave | |||
Antenna questions from Beginner | Shortwave |