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#1
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GENTLEMEN, behave yourselves.
The ONLY way of modelling the effect of a loading coil in an antenna wire is to consider it to be a section of a continuous-inductance-loaded transmission line which also has a radiation resistance. Which, of course, is what it actually is. It can then be incorporated in the remainder of the system which consists of other radiating transmission line sections. As with all other lines it has length and diameter (that of the coil former). It has a uniformly distributed capacitance (to the rest of the world) per unit length. It has normal distributed inductance per unit length PLUS the MUTCH extra inductance due to being wound as a coil. It has the normal RF wire loss resistance. It has a uniformly distributed radiation resistance according to the length of the coil former. (NOT of the length of the wire on the coil.) R, L and C are all calculable, or at least can be estimated, from dimensions. So in an antenna system, in general, we have 3 consectutive transmission lines sections with the loading coil forming the center section. Because of the high inductance of the loading coil, Zo = Sqrt(L/C) will have a much higher value than that of a wire of the same straight length. If a generator (transmitter) is applied at one end then currents, voltages and phase relationships at any point along the overall length can be calculated. Mismatches between Zo's of the various sections are automatically taken into account. But we are ultimately interested only in input impedance, efficiency and power radiated. All the intermediate stuff which may be available in the process is just so much waffle for the old wives to haggle about. As is well known, the coil alone, a simple helix, if of appreciable former length relative to a 1/4-wavelength, will radiate. Download in a few seconds program HELICAL and run immediately. Enter the following values - Height = 2.5m Coil dia = 50mm Coil turns = 750 Wire dia = 2.5mm Rod length = 0mm Rod dia = 0mm Ground loss = 8 ohms Computed results are the performance of a Helical 160 meter band antenna which was popular a few years back amongst UK mobile amateurs. Its a case of the height being so low and the loading inductance being so big that it occupies the whole length of the antenna. Why waste the space? ---- .................................................. .......... Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.btinternet.com/~g4fgq.regp .................................................. .......... |
#2
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Reg Edwards wrote:
So in an antenna system, in general, we have 3 consectutive transmission lines sections with the loading coil forming the center section. Because of the high inductance of the loading coil, Zo = Sqrt(L/C) will have a much higher value than that of a wire of the same straight length. (Rhetorical Question) Given that the coil section resembles a high-Zo transmission line with reflections, how can the current into the coil section be equal in magnitude and phase to the current out of the coil section? -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#3
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![]() Cecil Moore wrote: Reg Edwards wrote: So in an antenna system, in general, we have 3 consectutive transmission lines sections with the loading coil forming the center section. Because of the high inductance of the loading coil, Zo = Sqrt(L/C) will have a much higher value than that of a wire of the same straight length. (Rhetorical Question) Given that the coil section resembles a high-Zo transmission line with reflections, how can the current into the coil section be equal in magnitude and phase to the current out of the coil section? -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp Maybe it's a half wavelength long? ;-) 73, Jim AC6XG |
#4
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![]() Cecil Moore wrote: Jim Kelley wrote: Maybe it's a half wavelength long? ;-) For a real-world air-core coil to exhibit identical currents at the input and output, it would have to be one wavelength long, lossless, and non-radiating. That's a pretty tall order just to support an old wives' tale. :-) I happily stand corrected. 73 de jk |
#5
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Reg wrote,
The ONLY way of modelling the effect of a loading coil in an antenna wire is to consider it to be a section of a continuous-inductance-loaded transmission line which also has a radiation resistance. Another absolutist, fairly assinine statement from across the pond. How do you know it's the ONLY way, Reg, have you tried any others? Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
#6
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Jim Kelley wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: (Rhetorical Question) Given that the coil section resembles a high-Zo transmission line with reflections, how can the current into the coil section be equal in magnitude and phase to the current out of the coil section? Maybe it's a half wavelength long? ;-) Strangely enough, that won't do it, Jim. A coil equivalent to 1/2WL reverses the phase of the current such that current is flowing into both ends at the same time. According to some gurus, that violates Kirchhoff's laws. But Kraus shows how phase-reversing coils are used in collinear arrays. Reckon Kraus knows he is violating Kirchhoff's laws? For a real-world air-core coil to exhibit identical currents at the input and output, it would have to be one wavelength long, lossless, and non-radiating. That's a pretty tall order just to support an old wives' tale. :-) -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#7
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Cecil wrote,
Reg Edwards wrote: So in an antenna system, in general, we have 3 consectutive transmission lines sections with the loading coil forming the center section. Because of the high inductance of the loading coil, Zo = Sqrt(L/C) will have a much higher value than that of a wire of the same straight length. (Rhetorical Question) Given that the coil section resembles a high-Zo transmission line with reflections, how can the current into the coil section be equal in magnitude and phase to the current out of the coil section? -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp An invidious post if ever I saw one. You've got to get out of the habit, Cecil, of believing the things you think up in your head. You've got a horrible case of I-think-therefore-it-is syndrome. Experiment more. Sit at the feet of Richard Clark and learn how to measure. Learn the truth first and then make up your theories, knowing beforehand that every theory is an abstraction. Leave the tunnel vision and its resultant dogmatism to the local baptist minister. Quit believing that you can win an argument with slippery evasions and insults, or that there is even any advantage in winning at all. If they are true, your ideas will fight their own battles, and if they're false, no amount of bluster and tortured logic will make people believe them. You've spent countless hours arguing the case for your interpretation of how waves work, and the only thing you've accomplished is that you've antagonized a group of people more knowledgeable than you are. I'm not asking you to give up, but it would be nice, both for the benefit of the newsgroup and for your reputation if you would temper your fanaticism with just a bit of experimentation, dispassionate reflection and self-doubt. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
#8
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Tdonaly wrote:
You've spent countless hours arguing the case for your interpretation of how waves work, and the only thing you've accomplished is that you've antagonized a group of people more knowledgeable than you are. A group more knowledgeable about EM waves than Eugene Hecht? It is not my interpretation of how waves work, Tom. It is the consensus of opinions of experts from the field of optics. Non-glare glass is exactly the same thing as a 1/4WL matching section in a transmission line and how the interference causes the match is fully understood. If proven, accepted knowledge from a closely related technical field antagonizes a bunch of closed-minded ivory tower gurus on this newsgroup, so be it. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#9
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Reg Edwards, G4FGQ wrote:
"It has a uniformly distributed radiation resistance according to the length of the coil form." That may be the case of "treating" radiation resistance as if uniformly distributed. Radiation resistance may be defined as the resistance which would take the same power as that radiated when placed at the high-current point of the antenna. While a transmission line of uniform cross section may have uniform inductance and capacitance per unit length, it is unlikely that an antenna has uniform capacitance per unit length. Electric field lines of force have a varying concentration along equal small segments of wire length. It`s usually a function of distance between wires and this varies in an antenna because the antenna is meant to radiate. Variation of capacitance along an antenna causes a variation in surge impedance along the antenna, but a useful average can be used for calculations. Straight wire or coiled as in a rubber ducky, an antenna is subject to this variation in capacitance and surge impedance. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#10
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"Tdonaly"
Reg wrote, The ONLY way of modelling the effect of a loading coil in an antenna wire is to consider it to be a section of a continuous-inductance-loaded transmission line which also has a radiation resistance. Another absolutist, fairly assinine statement from across the pond. How do you know it's the ONLY way, Reg, have you tried any others? Tom Donaly, KA6RUH ======================== Tom, beware the Green-eyed Technology Goddess. WE have modelling programs which actually WORK. And FREE to US citizens. Is this 'dumping' of shoddy goods? After gigabytes upon gigabytes of civil war amongst yourselves - YOU havn't! ---- .................................................. .......... Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.btinternet.com/~g4fgq.regp .................................................. .......... |
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