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Old May 11th 05, 01:11 AM
Gary
 
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Default RF Grounding and Shorting a G5RV for use on 160 Meters

I'm thinking of tossing up a G5RV and perhaps using it at times on 160
meters by shorting the braid and center conductor. What do I need for
buried radials ? Will several 40' - 50' radials work satisfactorially
or would one ~125' radial be best ? I could run a 125' radial but not
in a straight line

I'm planning on using No. 14 Ga solid insulated wire. I think I've
read in this newsgroup that the buried wire doesn't have to be bare ?

Also does anyone have a more elegant way of shorting the inner
conductor and braid together than the half axxed contraption I'd
cobble together ?

Thanks in advance.

Gary
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Old May 11th 05, 02:39 AM
Roy Lewallen
 
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Gary wrote:
I'm thinking of tossing up a G5RV and perhaps using it at times on 160
meters by shorting the braid and center conductor. What do I need for
buried radials ? Will several 40' - 50' radials work satisfactorially
or would one ~125' radial be best ? I could run a 125' radial but not
in a straight line


Several shorter radials will definitely be better than a single long one.

I'm planning on using No. 14 Ga solid insulated wire. I think I've
read in this newsgroup that the buried wire doesn't have to be bare ?


Yes, that's correct.

Also does anyone have a more elegant way of shorting the inner
conductor and braid together than the half axxed contraption I'd
cobble together ?


It's hard to say how to make something better than something for which
we have no description. Surely it can't be too hard to short two
conductors together.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL
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Old May 11th 05, 07:25 AM
Gary
 
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On Tue, 10 May 2005 18:39:16 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote:

Gary wrote:
I'm thinking of tossing up a G5RV and perhaps using it at times on 160
meters by shorting the braid and center conductor. What do I need for
buried radials ? Will several 40' - 50' radials work satisfactorially
or would one ~125' radial be best ? I could run a 125' radial but not
in a straight line


Several shorter radials will definitely be better than a single long one.

I'm planning on using No. 14 Ga solid insulated wire. I think I've
read in this newsgroup that the buried wire doesn't have to be bare ?


Yes, that's correct.

Also does anyone have a more elegant way of shorting the inner
conductor and braid together than the half axxed contraption I'd
cobble together ?


It's hard to say how to make something better than something for which
we have no description. Surely it can't be too hard to short two
conductors together.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


Thanks Roy, I can certainly short two conductors together. I was just
thinking of minimizing any amount of stray RF that might arrise given
my propensity to make Rube Goldberg type contraptions out of something
that should be an easy task.

Gary
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Old May 11th 05, 03:06 PM
Bob Miller
 
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On Tue, 10 May 2005 18:39:16 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote:

Gary wrote:
I'm thinking of tossing up a G5RV and perhaps using it at times on 160
meters by shorting the braid and center conductor. What do I need for
buried radials ? Will several 40' - 50' radials work satisfactorially
or would one ~125' radial be best ? I could run a 125' radial but not
in a straight line


Several shorter radials will definitely be better than a single long one.

I'm planning on using No. 14 Ga solid insulated wire. I think I've
read in this newsgroup that the buried wire doesn't have to be bare ?


Yes, that's correct.

Also does anyone have a more elegant way of shorting the inner
conductor and braid together than the half axxed contraption I'd
cobble together ?


It's hard to say how to make something better than something for which
we have no description. Surely it can't be too hard to short two
conductors together.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


One question, if shorting the leads to feed the g5rv "marconi style",
would it be better to connect the single wire to the antenna tuner's
random wire connection, or to the coax connection, or does it matter?

bob
k5qwg



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Old May 11th 05, 03:06 PM
Asimov
 
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Hi,

Say, I've got a question about something I've read about the Swift
gamma ray detection satellite. It's detector consisted of an antenna
composed of 52,000 lead blocks arranged by computer generated
pseudo-random locations and glued to the back of a sheet of 4x8
plywood. The actual detectors where located in the spaces between the
blocks. It wasn't mentioned but I think these were probably crystals
which give off a pulse of electricity every time they are struck by a
gamma ray.

Anyways my question is, in your opinion, what is the purpose of the
pseudo random arrangement of this "apperture mask" antenna? I suspect
it has something statistical related to the nature of ambient noise
signals. I tried making a pc simulation of this but I get the same
answer whether the array is in rows or pseudo-random. I tried with
noise but I saw no reduction. I haven't tried adding a signal to the
noise in the simulation yet though...

A*s*i*m*o*v

.... Three types of lies: lies, damn lies, and statistics - Mark Twain.



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Old May 11th 05, 04:02 PM
Frank
 
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It's hard to say how to make something better than something for which
we have no description. Surely it can't be too hard to short two
conductors together.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


One question, if shorting the leads to feed the g5rv "marconi style",
would it be better to connect the single wire to the antenna tuner's
random wire connection, or to the coax connection, or does it matter?

bob
k5qwg



How much current will actually flow in the center conductor of the shorted
coaxial feedline? The single wire connection makes much more sense.

I never liked the G5RV antenna since it just seemed like a high loss method
of feeding a 102 ft piece of wire.

Frank
VE6CB


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Old May 11th 05, 04:10 PM
Fred W4JLE
 
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What is the basis of your "high loss method" statement?

"Frank" wrote in message
news:O7pge.61496$tg1.25181@edtnps84...

I never liked the G5RV antenna since it just seemed like a high loss

method
of feeding a 102 ft piece of wire.

Frank
VE6CB




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Old May 11th 05, 04:58 PM
Frank
 
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"Fred W4JLE" wrote in message
...
What is the basis of your "high loss method" statement?

"Frank" wrote in message
news:O7pge.61496$tg1.25181@edtnps84...

I never liked the G5RV antenna since it just seemed like a high loss

method
of feeding a 102 ft piece of wire.

Frank
VE6CB


The following is based on an analysis I did for a ham Friend. Consider a 102
ft bent dipole (REF: Richards Antenna v4), fed in the center with 33ft of
300 ohm tubular, followed by 25 ft of 75 ohm twin.

Frequency Total feedline loss
(MHz) (dB)

1.8 24.8
3.8 4.9
7.1 2.4
10.1 10.2
14.1 1.4
18.1 3.0
21.2 9.1
24.9 2.7
28.5 3.9

If you are interested I can e-mail you the complete analysis in Microsoft
Word showing various feedline combinations from 1.8 to 30 MHz. If you have
a particular structure in mind I can also do the analysis. I use NEC2 based
software in combination with the ARRL's transmission line analysis program.

Regards,

Frank
VE6CB


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Old May 11th 05, 06:14 PM
Frank
 
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"Fred W4JLE" wrote in message
...
Frank, with all due respect I disagree with your analysis. I would
appreciate your sending me the data so we may both start at the same
discussion point. will get the info to me.

73
Fred


Thanks Fred, I am happy when people disagree with me, since then I have a
chance of learning something. I will e-mail you my analysis.

73,

Frank


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