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#1
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How does one construct a bazooka using 75 ohm coax for the radiating
portion and 50 ohm coax for the feed (as usual)? The obvious reason is that I have a pot full of random length, unused 75 cable I would like to find a good use for. Most of it is RG-6 TV coax variant or such. I have not seen design equations for the bazooka, just articles saying "cut it to these dimensions" (don't worry your pretty little head implied, but not stated...) Thanks for any help, Phil - N4GWV |
#2
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On Thu, 15 Jan 2004 16:52:30 -0600, Phillip Jockell
wrote: How does one construct a bazooka using 75 ohm coax for the radiating portion and 50 ohm coax for the feed (as usual)? The obvious reason is that I have a pot full of random length, unused 75 cable I would like to find a good use for. Most of it is RG-6 TV coax variant or such. Phil - N4GWV The only thing to be concerned about is the velocity factor to obtain the correct lengths. The impedance is not factor. That said, before you spend you time and money I suggest you review Walt Maxwell's evaluation of that antenna at http://home.iag.net/~w2du/Reflection...bleBazooka.pdf 73 Danny, K6MHE |
#3
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How does one construct a bazooka using 75 ohm coax for the radiating
portion and 50 ohm coax for the feed (as usual)? Phillip, The best thing would be to short the shield and inner conductor of the coax and use it as your typical wire dipole. The old standard 468/f(mhz) should work as a starting point. Do an swr sweep, or trim for lowest swr at your transmitter. A 1:1 balun at the antenna is good engineering practice to minimize transmission line radiation. Be aware that the magical 1:1 swr may not be possible feeding a dipole with 50 ohm coax. Modern literature on the subject of bazookas indicate they will give broader bandwidth at the expense of decreased efficiency. Depends on what you want from your antenna. 73 Gary N4AST |
#4
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Since "bazooka" conjures up at least three pretty different images for
me (and that's just with respect to antennas), could you explain a bit more just how you're thinking of building it? Is it like http://www.qsl.net/we6w/projects/baz_std.txt? If so, I believe you want to make the coax sections close to 1/4 wave long, accounting for the velocity factor of the coax you use. Expect the coax part, as transmission lines, to reflect a reactance back to the feedpoint...the reactance they reflect as a function of frequency does depend on the impedance of the line you use. You could model it with EZNec, or use any of the many available transmission line calculators to find it. What's across the feedpoint is just the two sections in series. The radiating part of the antenna is just the outside surface of the coax (or whatever conductors you have). Cheers, Tom Phillip Jockell wrote in message . .. How does one construct a bazooka using 75 ohm coax for the radiating portion and 50 ohm coax for the feed (as usual)? The obvious reason is that I have a pot full of random length, unused 75 cable I would like to find a good use for. Most of it is RG-6 TV coax variant or such. I have not seen design equations for the bazooka, just articles saying "cut it to these dimensions" (don't worry your pretty little head implied, but not stated...) Thanks for any help, Phil - N4GWV |
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