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#1
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Hi All
I will be moving to a house early next year that has 90ft trees scattered around the backyard. Rather than setup a tower (initially anyway) I am looking at hanging a wire (1/2" braid) 2 metre collinear for a rope between the trees and feeding it from the bottom end. Firstly talking about phasing sections. Has anyone come accross the maths/size of using a single turn of stiff wire (looks like a ring match) to go between the elements? Was thinking a short length of PVC pipe with dowel or fibreglass spacers. How big? What is the general figure of merit for shortening the topmost element by when joined to a (say) PVC insulator. And feeding. Was thinking about the J pole type match - The two parallel wires 1/4 wavelenth long and a direct coax feed a few inches from the bottom. Are there any better end/voltage fed methods? Any thoughts or other construction methods/ideas appreciated. Cheers Bob VK2YQA |
#2
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On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 20:50:10 +1100, Bob Bob
wrote: Any thoughts or other construction methods/ideas appreciated. Hi Bob, Given the title of the thread and the nature of your quest, I would suggest you research the "Franklin Array." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
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Richard Clark wrote:
"I would suggest you research the "Franklin Array"." Current reverses at the open-circuit end of an antenna. 180-degrees back from the open end it reverses again. Current flowing in opposite directions begins to reduce the field strength perpendicular to the antenna when the total length reaches 5/8-wavelength. At a point 1/2-wave or 5/8-wave back from the open circuit, a phase inverter is used to produce (2) mostly in-phase antenna segments. Some ways to get in-phase segments are to drive the array at that point. Or, to connect the segments through a short-circuit 1/4-wave stub. The "Super-J Maritime Antenna" in the ARRL Antenna Book uses this method. Or, use a lumped network in place of the short-circuit stub. Kraus shows an interesting and simple phase inverter in Figure 23-21(b) on page 824 of his 3rd edition of "Antennas". The inverters are self-resonant coils. No external capacitors required. They are "traps". Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#4
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Richard Harrison wrote:
Kraus shows an interesting and simple phase inverter in Figure 23-21(b) on page 824 of his 3rd edition of "Antennas". The inverters are self-resonant coils. Since there is no phase shift through a coil, how could that possibly work? :-) -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
#5
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Cecil, W5DXP wrote:
"Since there is no phase shift through a coil, how could that possibly work?" You put a sticker on the coil maming it a retardation coil. It then must delay the energy and that is phase shift by definition. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#6
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Richard Harrison wrote:
You put a sticker on the coil maming it ... Watch out - the society for prevention of cruelty to coils will get you. |
#7
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![]() "Bob Bob" wrote in message ... Hi All I will be moving to a house early next year that has 90ft trees scattered around the backyard. Rather than setup a tower (initially anyway) I am looking at hanging a wire (1/2" braid) 2 metre collinear for a rope between the trees and feeding it from the bottom end. Firstly talking about phasing sections. Has anyone come accross the maths/size of using a single turn of stiff wire (looks like a ring match) to go between the elements? Was thinking a short length of PVC pipe with dowel or fibreglass spacers. How big? What is the general figure of merit for shortening the topmost element by when joined to a (say) PVC insulator. And feeding. Was thinking about the J pole type match - The two parallel wires 1/4 wavelenth long and a direct coax feed a few inches from the bottom. Are there any better end/voltage fed methods? Any thoughts or other construction methods/ideas appreciated. Cheers Bob VK2YQA Bob, I don't know about the 5/8, but you are basically on the right track. I once bought an Andrew 1900 MHz vertical that claimed 8 or 10 dbi gain, non directional. It had multiple radiators stacked vertically inside a plastic tube about 1/2 inch OD, couple of feet tall. No idea how it was phased internally, but don't think it had any coils in there. I had it mounted via an N connector on top of a metal box, but don't think it required a ground plane. Tam/WB2TT |
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