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#11
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Frank,
The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Frank wrote: I have been using an 80 meter loaded vertical for a couple of years with moderate success. The ground system is a dozen 'untuned' radials 40 or so feet laying on the ground. The feed line is about 100 feet of RG-8 coax. The SWR in the shack is about 1.1 to 1. I have done some research on the antenna and based on it parameters it should have a radiation resistance of about 4 Ohms. This says that the coil and ground are absorbing on the order of 45 Ohms. This is 10db performance loss. I have limited space and the most common solutions are not available to me. From a practical perspective it would seem to me that building a 40 foot center feed loaded dipole and putting it in the attic or on the roof would probably perform somewhat better. Is this a reasonable assumption? Would burying the radials and connecting them to several 4 square foot buried screens substantially help the ground system? Thanks, Dan kb0qil How high is the antenna, where is the loading coil placed, what is its value, and Q? Frank |
#12
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Frank,
The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Frank wrote: I have been using an 80 meter loaded vertical for a couple of years with moderate success. The ground system is a dozen 'untuned' radials 40 or so feet laying on the ground. The feed line is about 100 feet of RG-8 coax. The SWR in the shack is about 1.1 to 1. I have done some research on the antenna and based on it parameters it should have a radiation resistance of about 4 Ohms. This says that the coil and ground are absorbing on the order of 45 Ohms. This is 10db performance loss. I have limited space and the most common solutions are not available to me. From a practical perspective it would seem to me that building a 40 foot center feed loaded dipole and putting it in the attic or on the roof would probably perform somewhat better. Is this a reasonable assumption? Would burying the radials and connecting them to several 4 square foot buried screens substantially help the ground system? Thanks, Dan kb0qil How high is the antenna, where is the loading coil placed, what is its value, and Q? Frank |
#13
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The local gardener who takes great pride and ownership in the lawn. The garage
can go mostly to seed, however the lawn must be pristine. Each antenna change meets with great resistance. Although defiantly was definitely a spell checker choice, it is also the correct one for getting radials. Dan Cecil Moore wrote: dansawyeror wrote: I will defiantly try adding radials. Who are you defying? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#14
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![]() "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Frank, The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Maybe I missed something, but how high is the TOP of the antenna. I.E. How long is the whip? Is the loading coil at the base, or partway up the antenna? Tam/WB2TT |
#15
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Tam,
The description was for the coil. The total antenna is about 15 feet base to tip. The coil is about 1/3 of the way up. The base is about 3 feet off the ground so the tip would be about 18 feet up. Dan Tam/WB2TT wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Frank, The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Maybe I missed something, but how high is the TOP of the antenna. I.E. How long is the whip? Is the loading coil at the base, or partway up the antenna? Tam/WB2TT |
#16
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![]() "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Tam, The description was for the coil. The total antenna is about 15 feet base to tip. The coil is about 1/3 of the way up. The base is about 3 feet off the ground so the tip would be about 18 feet up. Dan Tam/WB2TT wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Frank, The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Maybe I missed something, but how high is the TOP of the antenna. I.E. How long is the whip? Is the loading coil at the base, or partway up the antenna? Tam/WB2TT Dan, Over perfect ground, I get an impedance of about 2.4 Ohms, with resonance very close to 3.8 MHz. What is the tallest tree in your yard? Tam |
#17
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Tam
That would relate very close to what the models predict. Where or how do you have such good ground? Dan Tam/WB2TT wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Tam, The description was for the coil. The total antenna is about 15 feet base to tip. The coil is about 1/3 of the way up. The base is about 3 feet off the ground so the tip would be about 18 feet up. Dan Tam/WB2TT wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Frank, The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Maybe I missed something, but how high is the TOP of the antenna. I.E. How long is the whip? Is the loading coil at the base, or partway up the antenna? Tam/WB2TT Dan, Over perfect ground, I get an impedance of about 2.4 Ohms, with resonance very close to 3.8 MHz. What is the tallest tree in your yard? Tam |
#18
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dansawyeror wrote:
All, I have been using an 80 meter loaded vertical for a couple of years with moderate success. The ground system is a dozen 'untuned' radials 40 or so feet laying on the ground. The feed line is about 100 feet of RG-8 coax. The SWR in the shack is about 1.1 to 1. I have done some research on the antenna and based on it parameters it should have a radiation resistance of about 4 Ohms. This says that the coil and ground are absorbing on the order of 45 Ohms. This is 10db performance loss. I have limited space and the most common solutions are not available to me. From a practical perspective it would seem to me that building a 40 foot center feed loaded dipole and putting it in the attic or on the roof would probably perform somewhat better. Is this a reasonable assumption? I'm not sure you can count on that. You'd still lose some in a matching/loading network, there'd be a lot of ground loss because of the low height, and absorption of some of the power from conductors in the house might occur. It wouldn't hurt to try, but leave your vertical up. Would burying the radials and connecting them to several 4 square foot buried screens substantially help the ground system? Just about anything you can do to increase the conductivity of the ground system, particularly close to the antenna, will help. Using screen is one thing. Burying the radials won't help. Adding more radials and making them longer will help. Unfortunately, making a few radials longer doesn't do much, and adding a bunch of short radials doesn't do much either -- you really have to do both to have a big effect. If possible, connect to any other nearby buried conductors such as metallic water pipes. The other thing you can do to improve the efficiency is to increase the radiation resistance of the antenna. You can do this of course by increasing the height of the antenna. Moving the loading coil upward will help, too, although you'll need more inductance. (The coil still won't be a major part of the overall loss, though.) A top hat is better yet. You can also increase the radiation resistance by making your antenna fatter. Use multiple wires in parallel, spaced about as far as you can, either along side each other, or fanned out, converging at the bottom. Finally, if you've got room, you can improve your overall efficiency by about 3 dB by putting in another identical antenna/ground system somewhere nearby and connecting the two in parallel. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#19
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![]() "dansawyeror" wrote in message news ![]() Tam That would relate very close to what the models predict. Where or how do you have such good ground? Dan You don't. That is just the best case. If you can add another 20 feet of wire to the top, and redo the inductor, the Z comes up to 16 Ohms. That's why I asked about the trees. Tam Tam/WB2TT wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Tam, The description was for the coil. The total antenna is about 15 feet base to tip. The coil is about 1/3 of the way up. The base is about 3 feet off the ground so the tip would be about 18 feet up. Dan Tam/WB2TT wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message ... Frank, The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Maybe I missed something, but how high is the TOP of the antenna. I.E. How long is the whip? Is the loading coil at the base, or partway up the antenna? Tam/WB2TT Dan, Over perfect ground, I get an impedance of about 2.4 Ohms, with resonance very close to 3.8 MHz. What is the tallest tree in your yard? Tam |
#20
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Frank,
The coil measures about 60 uH. The antenna is elevated about 3 feet on a short tripod. The radials angle down the tripod legs and then out. The coil is about 4 inchs in diameter, number 12, wound on a fiberglass form. It is centerloaded. I am looking at it accross the yard, it is about 6 inches long. It is would with about a point .5 pitch. Calculations for a 1:1 pitch predict a Q of about 450. Thanks, Dan Thanks for the info Dan. From your comments the radials appear to be parallel with the tripod legs to ground level, and then continue at ground level for the rest of their length. What is the angle of the tripod legs? I agree with comments about adding a horizontal wire to the top of the vertical; it will probably be easier than a capacity hat. I am overloaded with work at the moment, but would like to attempt a model in a week or so when I have less work. 73, Frank |
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