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Modeling a 17 foot folded dipole made from copper #18 wire spaced at 2
inches at 14.2 MHz with EZNEC shows a feedpoint impedance of 46.1 + j1893 ohms. This can be resonated, as Richard Harrison recently pointed out, with a series capacitor. There's no free lunch, though -- at 1 kW, the voltage across the capacitor is almost 9000 V RMS (about 12,000 volts peak), and even at 10 watts, it's almost 900 volts RMS. Besides concerns about arcing, you'd have to make sure the insulation across the capacitor is very good, since even a very small leakage current will cause significant loss. And you end up with a fairly narrow-banded antenna, with the 2:1 SWR bandwidth of about 130 kHz. The loss due to finite wire conductivity is 1.9 dB, which might or might not be acceptable, depending on the particular use. Increasing the wire size will reduce the loss, but also the bandwidth -- introducing loss nearly always improves bandwidth, so reducing it narrows the bandwidth. Without wire loss, and assuming the resulting 29 ohm feedpoint impedance is transformed to 50 ohms, the 2:1 SWR bandwidth becomes 80 kHz. Like a great number of variations, this antenna would surely be useful to some people in some situations, and might well be better than some other alternatives. But here's an antenna rule you can take to the bank: Small--broad band--efficient, choose any two. Any time either a modeling program or an antenna inventor or seller tell you any different, you should be very, very skeptical. Roy Lewallen, W7EL alhearn wrote: I've recently done some NEC-2 (MultiNEC) modeling of folded dipoles which might help answer some of your questions. Translating the results to folded monoploes should be fairly straightforward. The model is a half-wave folded dipole for 14.2 MHz in freespace, resonant at 33.15 feet using #18 wire with 2 inch spacing. The center-fed input impedance is 289 - j0.01, which is 4 times the resonant impedance of 72 ohms for a conventional dipole. A folded 1/4-wavelength monopole would have half that impedance, or about 144 ohms. Examining the R-X curves for this dipole shows that it has characteristics very similar to a 3/2-wavelength dipole, operating at its third harmonic, and on a relatively low-slope part of the curves, indicating a low Q and good bandwidth, similar to a fat dipole. Shortening the antenna increases capacitive reactance, as might be expected. However, input resistance *increases* as the length decreases, which is contrary to our experience with common 1/2-wavelength dipoles. This is because we're on the high side of full-wave resonance, where very high resistance values exist at its peak. As we shorten the antenna, we're climbing the full-wave resistance curve, which peaks when the antenna length is 22 feet. If we further shorten the antenna past full-wave resonance, we now begin experiencing a "normal" decrease in resistance as we "slide" back down the low side of the full-wave resistance spike. However, capacitive reactance has now quickly changed to inductive reactance as we crossed full-wave resonance. If we continue to shorten the folded antenna length, we come to a length of about 17 feet where the input impedance is 50 + j2000 ohms. Notice that the impedance is *inductive*, not capacitive as we are accustomed to seeing with ordinary short dipoles. The inductive 2000 ohms can be cancelled with a series capacitor (or other suitable matching network). Q has increased (because we're on a relatively steep part of the R-X curves) and bandwidth has narrowed considerably from the resonance at 33.15 feet. So, by reducing the length of the 1/2-wavelength folded dipole from 33.15 feet to 17 feet, we have a 50 ohm resistive impedance by matching the inductive reactance with a capacitor (or split capacitor) instead of the usual lossy, low-Q loading coils. Gain and patterns appear to be the same as a conventional dipole. Translated to a monopole, the length would be a little more than half the dipole's 17 feet, to boost feed point resistance from 25 ohms to 50 ohms. My guess is (I haven't modeled it) that this antenna functions much like a 3/8-wavelength monopole, although much shorter. Actually building this antenna and placing it the real world will obviously change the above values. Unfortunately, it doesn't appear that any combination of element size and spacing will offset the need for impedance matching with the shortened folded dipole or monopole. I hope this makes sense. I'm sure Roy, Cecil, Tom, and others might have comments/corrections that will be helpful to me and others who are relative neophytes in the wonderful world of antennas. Al WA4GKQ |
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