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#1
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![]() This is the first time I've done this. If the need arises again, I'll have to download and try EZNEC, I guess. Meanwhile, I am concerned about the efficiency of our ARES Command Center HF antenna system. Could someone please advise me what feedpoint SWRs would be seen on a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz. It is operated at 3.98 MHZ, 5.4 MHz, and 7.2 MHz The 100 watt radio has one of those built in tuners that can only handle 3:1 SWR. I suspect we are terribly inefficient. Thanks for any response. Ed K7AAT |
#2
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Ed wrote in
92.196: This is the first time I've done this. If the need arises again, I'll have to download and try EZNEC, I guess. Meanwhile, I am concerned about the efficiency of our ARES Command Center HF antenna system. Could someone please advise me what feedpoint SWRs would be seen on a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz. It is operated at 3.98 MHZ, 5.4 MHz, and 7.2 MHz The 100 watt radio has one of those built in tuners that can only handle 3:1 SWR. I suspect we are terribly inefficient. Ed, I am not sure exactly what you mean by a "a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz". I assume you mean a centre fed dipole that is an electrical half wave at 6.2MHz. The efficiency of the radiator component can be estimated from an NEC model, it is probably very high and not the real issue. Components of an antenna system interact with each other in a complex way, and it is important to analyse the entire antenna system (radiator, earth, transmission line, balun, ATU etc) to obtain a correct understanding of how the antenna system works overall. In your case, the feedline and ATU are the likely main contributors to antenna system loss. Antenna system loss, transmitter behaviour, and antenna pattern are the main contibutors to station performance. To illustrate with an example. One Saturday a few months ago, I had 7MHz three QSOs in a row with our new six hour hams who were each using an 80m half wave dipole fed with a substantial run of RG58C/U coax and an ATU. I explained to them that their antenna would work ten times better on 7MHz if their antenna was half the length. A difficult concept for people with six hours investment in ham radio to understand. A fourth person who had heard one of the QSOs (and had apparently called me, but I couldn't dig him out of the noise) emailed me saying he was using the same setup and now knew the problem, it had to be the ATU. I replied to him that the ATU probably wasn't losing all that much power, the high coax losses protected the ATU from an extreme load and extreme loss. Again a hard concept to swallow when the ATU is closer to the transmitter but something downstream "protects" it from higher loss. Owen |
#3
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![]() I am not sure exactly what you mean by a "a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz". I assume you mean a centre fed dipole that is an electrical half wave at 6.2MHz. Yes. My appologies for leaving out a critical description. Its a wire centerfed halfwave antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roof, and resonant at 6.2 MHz. The people who installed it expected the tuner in the FT900 radio to handle the matching. I explained that the tuner was never intended to match an antenna that would be so far off resonance. To compound matters, they are using at least 100 feet of 50 ohm coax... mostly RG- 8, I think. The efficiency of the radiator component can be estimated from an NEC model, it is probably very high and not the real issue. Well, in this case, it IS a necessary issue. I wish to present the probably actual feedpoint SWR to these people so they will realize how far beyond tolerance they are trying to use that built in tuner. That is why I was asking for SWR estimates for 3.95MHz, 7.2MHz, and 5.4MHz. I intend to propose going to a resonant antenna, and use traps or multiple dipoles to present a near 50ohm feedpoint to the coax and tuner for those three frequencies of operation. ... so.... if anyone could run those figures, I'd sure appreciate it. Ed PS: Thanks for the info, though, Owen. |
#4
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Ed wrote in
. 192.196: I am not sure exactly what you mean by a "a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz". I assume you mean a centre fed dipole that is an electrical half wave at 6.2MHz. Yes. My appologies for leaving out a critical description. Its a wire centerfed halfwave antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roof, and resonant at 6.2 MHz. The people who installed it expected the tuner in the FT900 radio to handle the matching. I explained that the tuner was never intended to match an antenna that would be so far off resonance. To compound matters, they are using at least 100 feet of 50 ohm coax... mostly RG- 8, I think. The efficiency of the radiator component can be estimated from an NEC model, it is probably very high and not the real issue. Well, in this case, it IS a necessary issue. I wish to present Whilst neither of us KNOW whether it is an issue, I suggest to you that based on experience radiator loss in this type of configurationis probably less than 2%. the probably actual feedpoint SWR to these people so they will realize how far beyond tolerance they are trying to use that built in tuner. That is why I was asking for SWR estimates for 3.95MHz, 7.2MHz, and 5.4MHz. You seem to be equating feed point VSWR and that seen by the built in tuner. That might be the case if the transmission line was lossless. It is unlikely to be, and we don't know again due to lack of information. You might find my article at http://www.vk1od.net/LOLL/index.htm which looks at multi-frequency use of a coax fed centre fed dipole of interest. Though it models a 66' dipole at 30' height, some (most) of the messages are relevant to your situation. Perhaps on reviewing the article, you will see my point that radiator loss is less important, and that understanding transmission line loss is very important to your problem. The article might even suggest some other options that you haven't nominated. Owen |
#5
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![]() You seem to be equating feed point VSWR and that seen by the built in tuner. That might be the case if the transmission line was lossless. It is unlikely to be, and we don't know again due to lack of information. Owen, I appreciate your responses, but I am at a loss as to what additional information one would need to model a center fed 75 foot long half wave antenna, resosnant at 6.2 MHz, positioned 15 feet above a flat metal roof, fed with 100 feet of 50 ohm coax (RG8), and operated on any one of three frequencies.... 3.95MHz, 5.4MHz, and 7.2 MHz. What parameter is missing to provide a good model of this? Ed |
#6
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but I am at a loss as to what
additional information one would need to model a center fed 75 foot long half wave antenna, resosnant at 6.2 MHz, positioned 15 feet above a flat metal roof, fed with 100 feet of 50 ohm coax (RG8), and operated on any one of three frequencies.... 3.95MHz, 5.4MHz, and 7.2 MHz. Small correction.... the feedline is also not important since all I am asking for is essentially the feedpoint impedance of this antenna at those three frequencies of operation. Ed K7AAT |
#7
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![]() "Ed" wrote in message 92.196... This is the first time I've done this. If the need arises again, I'll have to download and try EZNEC, I guess. Meanwhile, I am concerned about the efficiency of our ARES Command Center HF antenna system. Could someone please advise me what feedpoint SWRs would be seen on a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz. It is operated at 3.98 MHZ, 5.4 MHz, and 7.2 MHz The 100 watt radio has one of those built in tuners that can only handle 3:1 SWR. I suspect we are terribly inefficient. Thanks for any response. Ed K7AAT Hi Ed I probably dont quite understand your situation. But, if your question is referenced to a 75 foot long center fed dipole 15 feet above a metal ground, EZNEC shows the terminal impedance will be 72 ohms at 6.4 MHz. The VSWR is under 3:1 from about 6.05 MHz to 6.5 MHz. Jerry (who used 1 mm diameter copper wire) |
#8
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"Jerry Martes" wrote in
news:ScTqi.3733$8u1.2359@trnddc07: "Ed" wrote in message 92.196... This is the first time I've done this. If the need arises again, I'll have to download and try EZNEC, I guess. Meanwhile, I am concerned about the efficiency of our ARES Command Center HF antenna system. Could someone please advise me what feedpoint SWRs would be seen on a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz. It is operated at 3.98 MHZ, 5.4 MHz, and 7.2 MHz The 100 watt radio has one of those built in tuners that can only handle 3:1 SWR. I suspect we are terribly inefficient. Thanks for any response. Ed K7AAT Hi Ed I probably dont quite understand your situation. But, if your question is referenced to a 75 foot long center fed dipole 15 feet above a metal ground, EZNEC shows the terminal impedance will be 72 ohms at 6.4 MHz. The VSWR is under 3:1 from about 6.05 MHz to 6.5 MHz. Jerry, are you saying that your model suggests the Z~=72+j0 at resonance, and the half wave dipole is ~0.1m above a perfectly conducting plane. It doesn't seem right. Owen |
#9
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Owen Duffy wrote in
: "Jerry Martes" wrote in news:ScTqi.3733$8u1.2359@trnddc07: "Ed" wrote in message 92.196... This is the first time I've done this. If the need arises again, I'll have to download and try EZNEC, I guess. Meanwhile, I am concerned about the efficiency of our ARES Command Center HF antenna system. Could someone please advise me what feedpoint SWRs would be seen on a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz. It is operated at 3.98 MHZ, 5.4 MHz, and 7.2 MHz The 100 watt radio has one of those built in tuners that can only handle 3:1 SWR. I suspect we are terribly inefficient. Jerry, are you saying that your model suggests the Z~=72+j0 at resonance, and the half wave dipole is ~0.1m above a perfectly conducting plane. It doesn't seem right. That should read "0.1 wl above..." |
#10
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![]() "Owen Duffy" wrote in message ... Owen Duffy wrote in : "Jerry Martes" wrote in news:ScTqi.3733$8u1.2359@trnddc07: "Ed" wrote in message 92.196... This is the first time I've done this. If the need arises again, I'll have to download and try EZNEC, I guess. Meanwhile, I am concerned about the efficiency of our ARES Command Center HF antenna system. Could someone please advise me what feedpoint SWRs would be seen on a wire antenna, 15 feet above a flat metal roofed building, (it a NVIS antenna), and resonant at 6.2 MHz. It is operated at 3.98 MHZ, 5.4 MHz, and 7.2 MHz The 100 watt radio has one of those built in tuners that can only handle 3:1 SWR. I suspect we are terribly inefficient. Jerry, are you saying that your model suggests the Z~=72+j0 at resonance, and the half wave dipole is ~0.1m above a perfectly conducting plane. It doesn't seem right. That should read "0.1 wl above..." The answer to the question would seem to be that it would not work very well just due to experiance. The swr would be off the charts and a rig that had an internal tuner would not tune that kind of antenna over that frequency range if the swr had to be under 3:1. Also the loss in the coax due to the high swr would be very large.. |
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