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#11
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Ted wrote:
I have about 40 feet of garden to erect an antenna....Could anyone tell me if I took 2 20 feet length of twin ladder and shorted the ends fed one side of the dipole with twin ladder and connected a 52 ohm resistor across the other side so the tx would see a match would be better than feeding a 40 foot endfed through an atu... My thinking is that most of the small antenna on the market are just dummy loads with a small amount of wire attached and appear to work so would my 40 feet work better.. ?? Many thanks to all who replied to my query... -- Regards Ted Wager Using PCLinuxos |
#12
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I have about 40 feet of garden to erect an antenna....Could anyone tell
me if I took 2 20 feet length of twin ladder and shorted the ends fed one side of the dipole with twin ladder and connected a 52 ohm resistor across the other side so the tx would see a match would be better than feeding a 40 foot endfed through an atu... My thinking is that most of the small antenna on the market are just dummy loads with a small amount of wire attached and appear to work so would my 40 feet work better.. ?? ...................................... If you are trying to avoid a dummy load, a resister is the last thing you want. It should be illegal to add resisters to otherwise perfectly good antennas. It's hard to comment about the antenna, as I don't know what bands, how much height, etc... Not enuff info... MK |
#14
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Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: It should be illegal to add resisters to otherwise perfectly good antennas. Except Rhombics, of course. :-) And Beverages ... |
#15
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![]() "Cecil Moore" wrote - Except Rhombics, of course. :-) ==================================== Cecil, get yourself up to date. A terminated rhombic is only 50 percent (or even less) efficient. It transmitts to, and receives from, only half of the available directions. A wicked waste of power. I can't imagine why anybody bothers to use one which is not rotateable. Have you ever erected a 160-meter or 80-meter or even a 40-meter rotateable rhombic? smiley ---- Reg, G4FGQ. |
#16
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On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 20:55:39 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote: "Cecil Moore" wrote - Except Rhombics, of course. :-) ==================================== Cecil, get yourself up to date. A terminated rhombic is only 50 percent (or even less) efficient. Actually, that is not true. A big enough rhombic is nearly self-terminating. The energy radiated is not available to the terminating resistor and thus is not -lost-. It transmitts to, and receives from, only half of the available directions. A wicked waste of power. I can't imagine why anybody bothers to use one which is not rotateable. Have you ever erected a 160-meter or 80-meter or even a 40-meter rotateable rhombic? smiley I completed my 2-meter Worked All Continents award by working VK5MC, who was using stacked rhombics (350 feet/leg), partially steerable by a rope and pulley arrangement. Worked for me [g]. |
#17
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![]() "Wes Stewart" wrote in message ... On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 20:55:39 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards" wrote: "Cecil Moore" wrote - Except Rhombics, of course. :-) ==================================== Cecil, get yourself up to date. A terminated rhombic is only 50 percent (or even less) efficient. Actually, that is not true. A big enough rhombic is nearly self-terminating. The energy radiated is not available to the terminating resistor and thus is not -lost-. It transmitts to, and receives from, only half of the available directions. A wicked waste of power. I can't imagine why anybody bothers to use one which is not rotateable. Have you ever erected a 160-meter or 80-meter or even a 40-meter rotateable rhombic? smiley I completed my 2-meter Worked All Continents award by working VK5MC, who was using stacked rhombics (350 feet/leg), partially steerable by a rope and pulley arrangement. Worked for me [g]. =========================================== Wes, of course it worked. You would have done even better had it not been terminated. =========================================== |
#18
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Reg Edwards wrote:
"Cecil Moore" wrote - Except Rhombics, of course. :-) ==================================== Cecil, get yourself up to date. A terminated rhombic is only 50 percent (or even less) efficient. It transmitts to, and receives from, only half of the available directions. A wicked waste of power. I can't imagine why anybody bothers to use one which is not rotateable. Have you ever erected a 160-meter or 80-meter or even a 40-meter rotateable rhombic? smiley ---- Reg, G4FGQ. Reg, during the Vietnam War we used a terminated rhombic from the State of Utah [USA desert area] to SEA [AKA Vietnam]as part of the antenna farm at AGA5HI [USAF MARS Gateway Station] for phone patch traffic. It would outperform the Yagi and the LP antenna. I was AFF1C TDY at AGA5HI [Hill Air Force Base, Utah] I don't believe there is a net loss of gain in the preferred direction. If one loses -3 dB in the resistor, does one not waste -3 dB in the non-preferred direction [180 degrees from the desired direction]? |
#19
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Don't get too hung up on efficiency. What counts is signal strength.
Suppose you have a bidirectional antenna. Unless you're talking to two people in opposite directions at the same time, it doesn't matter if the antenna is 100% efficient and half the power goes into an unused reverse lobe or whether it goes into a resistor which makes the antenna 50% efficient. The result is exactly the same as far as the other station is concerned. So to the extent that the rhombic isn't optimal, it's because it's inherently bidirectional, not necessarily because it's inefficient. A bidirectional antenna is usually not an optimum choice. For the same number of elements or same amount of real estate, you can usually make a unidirectional antenna which has a single main lobe of about the same width but 3 dB greater gain. Or, you can have a main lobe of about the same gain as before but greater width, which is an advantage when the antenna can't be rotated. However, this doesn't say anything about simplicity, which is the main attractiveness of a rhombic, along with its bandwidth. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#20
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Reg Edwards wrote:
A terminated rhombic is only 50 percent (or even less) efficient. But it's 50% in the bad direction, not the good direction. :-) -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
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