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#1
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I was going to stay out of this fight,but it has just gotten too silly.
So;"Can twisted wire replace shielded wire?" The simple answer is yes. But there is a big BUT. In a very quite RF locaiton, like the middle of the woods where there are no electric/phone/CATV lines, no TVs, no motors, no flourescent lamps a "twisted pair" can work ery well. Slightly lower losses, but my experiments in such a RF quite locaiton show no practical or detectable effects for LF through F (say 50KHz through 30MHz). If you have any RF noise sources, in many cases this will include your receiver as many modern recievers have some (to a lot) of RFI potiential, you will need to reduce the noise that gets into/onto your signal. Balanced open wire, AKA "ladder line" is better then twisted pair as far as line losses are concerend. But open line is more susceptable to ingress unless great care is taken to keep it well away from "anything" that will cause imbalance. Sadly the "anything" really means anything. At LF through HF the effects aren't all that important. A trick I learned back in the days of tall towers for VHF an UHF TV antennas was to put a 1 twist per foot in the twinlead. This often greatly reduced ghosting from very bad to not visible. So back to the orignal question: "Can twisted wire replace shielded wire?" Yes, under the right conditions. But in the real world, at least where I live, Coax, or Twinax or Triax, is much better because it reduces any additional noise I could pick up as my lead in leaves the antenna and reaches my receiver. I have used common twisted "bell" wire when I didn't have coax and if the location was quite, it worked great. The real question is not can twisted wire be used, but how well can you isolate twisted or parallel(think lamp cord) from your noise generators. It can be done, but coax is a lot easier to keep quite. I have enough RF noise that I can't reduce, there is no way I want to add any more RF crud to my 1uV signals. Terry |
#2
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#3
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![]() David wrote: snip Common mode rejection. Look it up. ++++++++++++++++++++++++ Just for grins lay a 100' of twisted leads, lamp cable and coax out on the ground. Attach 50 Ohm resisitors at the far end of each. Swtich from one to the other and see which one picks up the most RF. MW stations will be received very well with both the twisted pair and lamp cord. Very close/strong MW stations may be recieved with evenpoor quality coax. Next build one of these to go between the feedline and your receiver: http://www.dxing.info/equipment/coax_leadin_bryant.pdf Repeat the experiment. If your results are anything like mine the twisted pair and the lamp cord will still have significant reception. True "common mode" only occurs when there is perfect balance between the conductors, with no "realworld" artifacts to effect that balance. The results I provided are real world, not from some SPICE simulation. I tried this with both a R2000 and a AOR 7030+. And I got nearly the exact same result with the AOR giving slightly better MW rejection with the coax and the in line filters. I preffer to use real world experiments whenever I can. I was surprised at how little difference the quality of the coax, or even the Z mattered. I expected no measurable difference between 50 and 75 Ohm coax. But even 93 ohm, low capacitance, coax acted the same. And the type of shield made no difference. By type of shield I am reffereing to: single braid, double braid, braid + foil and even some real cheap foil and drain only. I even did a repeat of this test at a ham friends QTH where he was putting up a repeater and had about 200' of hardline stretched out on the ground. Worked pretty well, but I had to add the chokes in the PDF link I gave. Now Triax did make a big difference. But only if you only grounded it at one end, the receiver end being about 20dB better. And Triax did not benifit from the common mode supression. It amde no difference. Terry |
#4
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#5
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![]() David wrote: Try it with a true balanced input. ++++++++++++++++++++++++Ihave. I used a home made 1:1 torroid tranformer with minitmal effects. I even tried it with a 1:1 balun at the far end, with no effect. The only point I am trying to make is that the twisted pair and paralled conductor that I tried were not completly balanced. Perhaps high quality CAT6 ethernet cable would be. We are moving into the realm of "how many angels can dance on the head of pin". Interesting from a philosphical point of view, but not much use in the real world. I have been trying to find better ways to reduce noise since before I got my EE. In my experience better reception, IE receiving the really weak signals, has more to do with reducing the QRM and QRN then "magic" feedlines. I am not in love with coax, it is just the easiest/best solution to keep my feedline from picking up noise, and with common mode supression, keeping noise from finding it's way back up the shield and getting into the antenna. As I have said, if I lived in the woods, with no electrical equipment to be sources of RF noise, then the type feedline I used would not matter. BTDT But in the world that I live in, there are a variety of noise sources in my house that I have mitigated as far as possible. One step in mitigation was to reduce QRM ingress as much as possible. With one, or more, PCs, AC to DC power supplies, DSP(rather noisy) and other noise sources in my shack, coupled with the other household equipment, "smart furnace" fridge, wifes PC, TV/VCR/DVD, microwave, alram clock, and every light switch, I found that I could not get a balanced RF feed to work. However the audio that I distribute around our home is balanced for the reasons you listed. At work we distribute some video via balanced tiwn-ax up to 2 miles. We are replacing these with fiber not because balanced doesn't work very well, but because lighting strikes keep frying the line drivers. In a situaiton where one was using a balanced antenna,like a dipole, with no significant local noise sources parallel, twisted or orpen ladder line would be great. For extremely high power transmit operations open ladder line is the best choice. But there will more leakage from the open line then from coax. Terry |
#6
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