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David G. Nagel wrote:
Ken Bessler wrote: I just put up an inverted V for 30 meters. I started out with each leg being 24'0". This gave me a low SWR at 9.5665 mhz which works out to 229.6 instead of the usual 234/F. As I trimmed, I decided to keep track of how much I trimmed and what the nnn/F number would be. As I got closer to my goal of 10.15, the number went down, eventually ending up at 227.28/10.1955=22.292' Also, the 2:1 swr bandwidth went up - it started at 567 kc and ended up at 655 kc. Either way, I got the antenna up and it's working fine - I'm just curious why the formula for length and the bandwidth changed as the antenna got shorter. Ken KG0WX 234/f is just a starting point. The "starting point" in question was a low 40m dipole, strung in the back alley of the old ARRL HQ building. For any other antenna, anywhere else in the universe, the "magic number 234" is going to be slightly different. The difference in SWR bandwidth between 2:1 points is a bit more complicated, and probably can't be explained in a one-liner. It will be mostly determined by the interplay between two factors: 1. What the resonant impedance is (in relation to 50 ohms), which determines the minimum SWR. 2. How quickly the reactive part of the feedpoint impedance changes with frequency, for different dipole lengths. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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