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#1
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I am proposing putting up a flat top 75 meter dipole at a height of 48'.
I would like to use the antenna primarily on both the 75 and 40 meter bands but not always. The antenna will have to be located almost 300 feet from the shack so I intend to use home brew 500 ohm line made with #12 solid copper conductors. The SWR on such a line will be quite high on both 75 and 40 and be all over the map on other bands. How about 160? My question is, what kind of transmission line losses will be present with SWR's up to 10 to 1 or even greater? I have my trusty Johnson Viking Kilowatt Matchbox to do the tuning in the shack. My present antenna is a 60' flat top dipole over the shack at an average height of 34'. There is approx. 70' of 450 ohm feed line going to the tuner. The Match Box loads the antenna on all bands from 75 thru 10 meters with excellent results and good feed line balance. I had to modify the Match Box to get it to 75 by utilizing the entire link and adding series tuning to it. Eznec reports an swr of over 100 to 1 on such an antenna on 75 but it gets out well. The #18 conductors have got to have hot spots with my 200 watts of output power! So far I haven't set anything on fire! Comments Please, Mike K6JSY |
#2
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Assuming a VSWR of 10 to 1, reasonable for 80 meters, and assuming line
losses are negligible for open wire tuned feeders, also reasonable for a first approximation, your line losses will be about -3 dB. EZNEC indicates that you will also have a VSWR of about 10:1 on 40 meters. Conclusion: you will experience about -3 dB loss [1/2 S unit] on both 75 and 40 when fed with 500 ohm line. Deacon Dave, W1MCE + + + Michael Efseaff wrote: I am proposing putting up a flat top 75 meter dipole at a height of 48'. I would like to use the antenna primarily on both the 75 and 40 meter bands but not always. The antenna will have to be located almost 300 feet from the shack so I intend to use home brew 500 ohm line made with #12 solid copper conductors. The SWR on such a line will be quite high on both 75 and 40 and be all over the map on other bands. How about 160? My question is, what kind of transmission line losses will be present with SWR's up to 10 to 1 or even greater? I have my trusty Johnson Viking Kilowatt Matchbox to do the tuning in the shack. My present antenna is a 60' flat top dipole over the shack at an average height of 34'. There is approx. 70' of 450 ohm feed line going to the tuner. The Match Box loads the antenna on all bands from 75 thru 10 meters with excellent results and good feed line balance. I had to modify the Match Box to get it to 75 by utilizing the entire link and adding series tuning to it. Eznec reports an swr of over 100 to 1 on such an antenna on 75 but it gets out well. The #18 conductors have got to have hot spots with my 200 watts of output power! So far I haven't set anything on fire! Comments Please, Mike K6JSY |
#3
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![]() Michael Efseaff wrote: I am proposing putting up a flat top 75 meter dipole at a height of 48'. I would like to use the antenna primarily on both the 75 and 40 meter bands but not always. The antenna will have to be located almost 300 feet from the shack so I intend to use home brew 500 ohm line made with #12 solid copper conductors. The SWR on such a line will be quite high on both 75 and 40 and be all over the map on other bands. How about 160? My question is, what kind of transmission line losses will be present with SWR's up to 10 to 1 or even greater? I have my trusty Johnson Viking Kilowatt Matchbox to do the tuning in the shack. You might expect matched line loss of around 0.1dB for 300ft of that type of line in dry conditions. The additional loss due to a VSWR of 10 would be around 0.4dB. The additional loss due to VSWR is probably quite manageable in this case up to about 25:1 where it would be 1dB. Some will argue, you could stand an S-point or two... you choose. There will be losses in the tuner additional to the above, so factor those into your loss budget. My present antenna is a 60' flat top dipole over the shack at an average height of 34'. There is approx. 70' of 450 ohm feed line going to the tuner. The Match Box loads the antenna on all bands from 75 thru 10 meters with excellent results and good feed line balance. I had to modify the Match Box to get it to 75 by utilizing the entire link and adding series tuning to it. Eznec reports an swr of over 100 to 1 on such an antenna on You have implied VSWR=100 on the 450 ohm line that you are using, or are you quoting the VSWR that would occur on a 50 ohm line? 75 but it gets out well. The #18 conductors have got to have hot spots with my 200 watts of output power! So far I haven't set anything on fire! Comments Please, Mike K6JSY |
#4
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Michael Efseaff wrote:
I am proposing putting up a flat top 75 meter dipole at a height of 48'. I would like to use the antenna primarily on both the 75 and 40 meter bands but not always. The antenna will have to be located almost 300 feet from the shack so I intend to use home brew 500 ohm line made with #12 solid copper conductors. The SWR on such a line will be quite high on both 75 and 40 and be all over the map on other bands. How about 160? Nope, the SWR will not be "quite high" on 75 and 40 or anything higher in frequency. It will be "quite high" on 160. I use such an antenna for the HF bands and the SWR on the 450 ohm ladder-line never goes higher than 15:1 which is acceptable because 450/15 = 30 ohms. Take a look at my all-HF-band dipole on my web page. -- 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! =----- |
#5
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Dave Shrader wrote:
Assuming a VSWR of 10 to 1, reasonable for 80 meters, and assuming line losses are negligible for open wire tuned feeders, also reasonable for a first approximation, your line losses will be about -3 dB. You assume line losses are negligible and then say line losses will be about -3dB? Exactly where are those losses occurring? -- 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! =----- |
#6
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Hm.
All in the same sentence, that "line losses are negligible" and "line losses will be about -3 dB"? I assume, of course that you mean 3 dB, not -3 dB. But does this mean that you consider 3 dB to be negligible? And how did you calculate that as the line loss? Roy Lewallen, W7EL Dave Shrader wrote: Assuming a VSWR of 10 to 1, reasonable for 80 meters, and assuming line losses are negligible for open wire tuned feeders, also reasonable for a first approximation, your line losses will be about -3 dB. EZNEC indicates that you will also have a VSWR of about 10:1 on 40 meters. Conclusion: you will experience about -3 dB loss [1/2 S unit] on both 75 and 40 when fed with 500 ohm line. Deacon Dave, W1MCE |
#7
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I should have been more specific. The line loss, in a 500 ohm open wire
tuned feeder system, IF MATCHED, can be assumed to be negligible. The presence of the additional losses caused by the amplitudes of the reflected components at a VSWR of 10:1 will be about 3 dB. Is 3 dB negligible? It's approximately 1/2 S unit. Whether or not 3 dB is negligible depends on the individual station. I get one judgment if I consider QRP and a different judgment if I consider QRO. For me, 3 dB on 75/40 is acceptable due to a single antenna limitation and 1 KW output. Roy, thanks for challenging my 'loose language'. DD Roy Lewallen wrote: Hm. All in the same sentence, that "line losses are negligible" and "line losses will be about -3 dB"? I assume, of course that you mean 3 dB, not -3 dB. But does this mean that you consider 3 dB to be negligible? And how did you calculate that as the line loss? Roy Lewallen, W7EL Dave Shrader wrote: Assuming a VSWR of 10 to 1, reasonable for 80 meters, and assuming line losses are negligible for open wire tuned feeders, also reasonable for a first approximation, your line losses will be about -3 dB. EZNEC indicates that you will also have a VSWR of about 10:1 on 40 meters. Conclusion: you will experience about -3 dB loss [1/2 S unit] on both 75 and 40 when fed with 500 ohm line. Deacon Dave, W1MCE |
#8
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Dave Shrader wrote:
I should have been more specific. The line loss, in a 500 ohm open wire tuned feeder system, IF MATCHED, can be assumed to be negligible. The presence of the additional losses caused by the amplitudes of the reflected components at a VSWR of 10:1 will be about 3 dB. Not with open-wire transmission line on 75m. It would be less than one dB. -- 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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You've still lost me. If the line loss is negligible when matched, even
a high SWR won't increase loss appreciably. That is, in fact, why people use open wire line when the SWR is high. So I don't believe your 3 dB figure is correct. Where did it come from? How was it calculated? Roy Lewallen, W7EL Dave Shrader wrote: I should have been more specific. The line loss, in a 500 ohm open wire tuned feeder system, IF MATCHED, can be assumed to be negligible. The presence of the additional losses caused by the amplitudes of the reflected components at a VSWR of 10:1 will be about 3 dB. Is 3 dB negligible? It's approximately 1/2 S unit. Whether or not 3 dB is negligible depends on the individual station. I get one judgment if I consider QRP and a different judgment if I consider QRO. For me, 3 dB on 75/40 is acceptable due to a single antenna limitation and 1 KW output. Roy, thanks for challenging my 'loose language'. |
#10
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Total loss = 10*log((a^2-|rho|^2)/(a(1 - |rho|^2))
ARRL Antenna 18th edition, Chapter 24, Equation 15 Whe a = matched line loss = assumed 1 rho = 0.8181 reflection coefficient for VSWR = 10 + + + OOOPPPSSS!!! Math error! Reviewing my calculations I made a major math error!! Glad I kept the work sheet. In the numerator I used rho^2 not (1 - rho^2). Now I am glad I retired from Engineering. :-) Thanks again Roy!! Conclusion, after I failed my ALGEBRA course, sheepish grin, the additional loss is zero within the stated assumptions. Which just proves I made 'Much ado about Nothing'. Deacon Dave, W1MCE I'll say three Hail Mary's and three Our Father's, assuming I can still count to three!! + + + Roy Lewallen wrote: You've still lost me. ... Where did it come from? How was it calculated? Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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