Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have a spool of 300 ohm antenna feed line out in the barn,
never been used. Probably enough there for some kind of antenna, I will have to unspool it and see how much is there. Anyone have anything good to say about those folded dipoles that use this 300 ohm line for both the antenna and the feed line? I have seen illustrations of folded dipoles using this, but in actual practice this line will naturally have some twising when it is suspended. I cannot imagine how you would keep it from doing this to some extent. What effect would this twisting have on the effectiveness of the antenna. The illustrations always show them geometrically perfect and straight and parallel. Bill |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 04:15:57 GMT, zeno wrote:
Anyone have anything good to say about those folded dipoles that use this 300 ohm line for both the antenna and the feed line? Hi Bill, Nope, not for both - hardly for either (and it is arguable that its Z even comes close to 300 Ohms). No reason not to try either. I have seen illustrations of folded dipoles using this, but in actual practice this line will naturally have some twising when it is suspended. I cannot imagine how you would keep it from doing this to some extent. What effect would this twisting have on the effectiveness of the antenna. Keeps it from thrashing in the wind. As far as noise pick-up, the twist (used by the power company) reduces that too. Insofar as its intended purpose - no effect, detrimental or beneficial. The illustrations always show them geometrically perfect and straight and parallel. Silly editors.... 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 04:15:57 GMT, zeno wrote:
I have a spool of 300 ohm antenna feed line out in the barn, never been used. Probably enough there for some kind of antenna, I will have to unspool it and see how much is there. Anyone have anything good to say about those folded dipoles that use this 300 ohm line for both the antenna and the feed line? I have seen illustrations of folded dipoles using this, but in actual practice this line will naturally have some twising when it is suspended. I cannot imagine how you would keep it from doing this to some extent. What effect would this twisting have on the effectiveness of the antenna. The illustrations always show them geometrically perfect and straight and parallel. Bill Hi Bill, Used just such an antenna a long time ago, Worked great.. and was cheap to make.. Problems that take some engineering ![]() 300 ohm line is not strong thus it will break either due to wind action or smiply from weight of snow or ice if not well supported. . you'll need a good method of supporting the connections at the center. when wet resonant frequency will change.. lower if I remeber correctly. you'll most likely need a tuner -- or an old tube rig like we used that wasn't that fussy about SWR. Power limited to about 200watts.. safely. Less if not tuned exactly or if line is wet. there is not much advantage over an ordinary dipole.. it is for the most part a single band antenna. But can be used like a dipole on 3rd harmonic. My recomendation put up a regular dipole , feed it with the 300 ohm stuff and a good balanced tuner.. you'll get more milage that way. 73 Dave Kc1di |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bill,
If you like 'playing' with antennas, why not try it? I doubt if you'll see any great difference in performance from a 'normal' dipole, and matching the '300' ohm feed line will be 'fun', but certainly 'do-able'. The usual 300 ohm twin lead that you find has certain problems when used for an antenna for the lower frequencies. Mechanical problems, as in strength (which has already been mentioned). Not really ~that~ big'a problem, but one you should be aware of. Twisting the line won't cause any problems and may relieve one, 'flopping' around in wind (also pointed out). Ever seen one of the twisted 'streamers' used in advertising tear it's self apart? Well, very often, anyway? Using a tuner (I know Cecil, but for me it's easier) to feed the folded dipole will make things 'more sinple' 'Doc |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Okay, I'm compelled to chime in on this one.
The ARRL antenna book has a "cookbook" design for using 300 ohm twinlead to make folded dipoles. In my 18th edition its the first thing in Chapter 15 "Portable Antennas", pg 15-1. It uses an open stub of the same 300 ohm twinlead to match to a 50 ohm coax. You could just as easily omit the stub and run the twinlead to a tuner. I have one made from Radio Shack 300 ohm wire. After cutting per the cookbook, including the stub, it tunes up perfectly on 3.775, only 25 kc up from the stated center frequency. The drawbacks to the design: 1)The stub, which is 37 feet long for 80 meters. You can replace the stub with a capacitor, but I had the twinlead on hand....and was interested in the design. 2)The fragility of the twinlead. Dave, KC1DI, mentioned that in his post too. I have the center taped to a foot-long chunk of electrical PVC, and a bit of nylon cord helping to support the feedline drop. That's been sufficient for two years, so far. 3)Power. I have no idea if this thing would stand up to a kilowatt, but it works fine at 100 watts. I'd be afraid to "smoke test" it.... Twisting, flopping, and drooping seem to make no difference. It plays as well as the inverted vee it replaced, but except for a better SWR bandwidth, its just a dipole. With the stub match, and a 90 foot coax run back to the shack, the SWR is under 2:1 from about 3625 to about 3910, but my rig's internal tuner handles the edges easily. The SWR seems to rise more sharply on the higher end of the band. I don't notice any changes in SWR when its wet--not yet anyway. On the positive side, the antenna is relatively light, and you can drop the 300 ohm feeder right to ground level rather than pulling 20 lbs of coax 40 feet up. And if you have a spool of twinlead sitting around--its free. I keep mine because its already in place, and it works. When it falls out of the tree, I might follow Dave's advice and put up a regular dipole fed with the twinlead. Its only unique quality is a slightly wider SWR bandwidth. Have fun.. 73 Keith, W4KAZ |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dunno about a folded dipole but some friends swear by using it to make
VHF/UHF J-Poles. They can be rolled up to carry easily or put inside plastic water pipe for rigidity. An 80 meter J-Pole? Well ....??? 73, K3DWW "zeno" wrote in message ... I have a spool of 300 ohm antenna feed line out in the barn,...... |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. | Antenna | |||
Plans for B&W BWD-65 & BWD-90 Folded Dipole Balun & Terminating Resistor | Antenna | |||
40 meter dipole or 88 feet doublet | Antenna | |||
Tuning a folded Dipole? | Antenna | |||
Folded dipole? | Antenna |