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#1
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The good old boys over on rec.boats.electronics continually worry over
having enough ground plane for their seagoing HF SSB antennae, which typically comprise a vertical or near vertical insulated rigging element fed thru a tuner. All of my HF antenna experience has been on land and I was always led to believe that salt water otta make a great ground plane for a HF vertical - at least a whole lot better than the dirt under mine. So why does everybody add copper strips, et cetera, to their bildges? TIA Howard, K3DWW |
#2
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"Vito Steockli" wrote in message
The good old boys over on rec.boats.electronics continually worry over having enough ground plane for their seagoing HF SSB antennae, which typically comprise a vertical or near vertical insulated rigging element fed thru a tuner. All of my HF antenna experience has been on land and I was always led to believe that salt water otta make a great ground plane for a HF vertical - at least a whole lot better than the dirt under mine. So why does everybody add copper strips, et cetera, to their bildges? ================================= Because it does not occur to anybody to try the obvious - just shout into the mike BEFORE going to all the trouble of fitting yards and yards of radials. In SALT sea water a 12 inch square plate is being extravagant. But not in unpolluted fresh water. |
#3
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In article ,
"Vito Steockli" wrote: The good old boys over on rec.boats.electronics continually worry over having enough ground plane for their seagoing HF SSB antennae, which typically comprise a vertical or near vertical insulated rigging element fed thru a tuner. All of my HF antenna experience has been on land and I was always led to believe that salt water otta make a great ground plane for a HF vertical - at least a whole lot better than the dirt under mine. So why does everybody add copper strips, et cetera, to their bildges? TIA Howard, K3DWW The reason folks put copper in the bildge is very simple. These folks are trying to couple the ground side of their antenna system to the Salt water that their vessel floats in. This can be done either by direct connection, or capacative coupling. In the direct connection method, electrolysis is a MAJOR problem. Most of these folks don't want their props and engines to dissappear in a matter on months, so they try and keep their vessels DC Isolated from the water. What's left is capacative coupling. How does one build a larger capacitor? Increase surface area of the capacative plates. (salt water being one plate) Decrease the distance between the plates. (Move the ground side closer to the water) Copper inside the hull works, and adding more surface area (copper) works. This isn't rocket science, but it does take a few nurons firing for a few seconds to figure it out. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#4
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Electrolysis maybe? :-)
Vito Steockli wrote: The good old boys over on rec.boats.electronics continually worry over having enough ground plane for their seagoing HF SSB antennae, which typically comprise a vertical or near vertical insulated rigging element fed thru a tuner. All of my HF antenna experience has been on land and I was always led to believe that salt water otta make a great ground plane for a HF vertical - at least a whole lot better than the dirt under mine. So why does everybody add copper strips, et cetera, to their bildges? TIA Howard, K3DWW |
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