Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello:
I am contemplating constructing an antenna where a center-fed HALF WAVE will be bent in a loop, only to be isolated at the almost-touching ends by a relay or some other means of a remotely controlled switch. When the relay contacts are open I will have very high RF voltages between the contacts, probably "a few KV" or even more. Are there any suggestions on where I could find a relay, if any, for this? Or any other means for doing this? An additional constraint is that the switching device needs to be light and small (say, 1-2 oz or 20-50 grams). Some ideas I have come up with a - A small vacuum relay (supplier, type?). - A home-made relay, providing more contact spacing than usually available. - A DC-motor (toy-type) driven mechanism to open and close contacts. - A mercury switch that could be tilted to make or break the contacts. - A string-operated switch to open and close the contacts (would run up the antenna mast). Any comments or suggestions? 73 - Kristinn, TF3KX |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() TF3KX wrote: Any comments or suggestions? I assume you are going to switch the loop for lowest band into a bent dipole, and close the relay on higher bands. You might consider a trap, because a relay would have to be very special at any power level. You are deealing with much more than twice the voltage at the ends of a normal dipole from contact to contact. I think your only hope for a relay is a high voltage vacuum relay with wide terminal spacing and good coil insulation. One of the large high voltage glass vacuum relays would be best. It might be possible to build a trap and adjust antenna length so it would work, but the trap would have to be very special in construction. It may not be practical. 73 Tom |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
TF3KX schreef:
Hello: I am contemplating constructing an antenna where a center-fed HALF WAVE will be bent in a loop, only to be isolated at the almost-touching ends by a relay or some other means of a remotely controlled switch. When the relay contacts are open I will have very high RF voltages between the contacts, probably "a few KV" or even more. Are there any suggestions on where I could find a relay, if any, for this? Or any other means for doing this? An additional constraint is that the switching device needs to be light and small (say, 1-2 oz or 20-50 grams). Some ideas I have come up with a - A small vacuum relay (supplier, type?). - A home-made relay, providing more contact spacing than usually available. - A DC-motor (toy-type) driven mechanism to open and close contacts. - A mercury switch that could be tilted to make or break the contacts. - A string-operated switch to open and close the contacts (would run up the antenna mast). Any comments or suggestions? 73 - Kristinn, TF3KX IMHO two high power relays would be an option, about 10 inches seperated from each other. For example Titanex (www.titanex.de) sells good High Power Ceramics Relais for this purpose: http://www.titanex.de/frames/acc.html#UB6-9 (HPRL) with power handling of 5 kW each. Palstar in the US use high power relais in some of theire antenna tuners, but those relays are not ceramic. Good luck! -- 73, Hans Remeeus (PA1HR) http://www.remeeus.eu Communication is about people, the rest is technology. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() TF3KX wrote: Hello: I am contemplating constructing an antenna where a center-fed HALF WAVE will be bent in a loop, only to be isolated at the almost-touching ends by a relay or some other means of a remotely controlled switch. When the relay contacts are open I will have very high RF voltages between the contacts, probably "a few KV" or even more. Are there any suggestions on where I could find a relay, if any, for this? Or any other means for doing this? An additional constraint is that the switching device needs to be light and small (say, 1-2 oz or 20-50 grams). Some ideas I have come up with a - A small vacuum relay (supplier, type?). - A home-made relay, providing more contact spacing than usually available. - A DC-motor (toy-type) driven mechanism to open and close contacts. - A mercury switch that could be tilted to make or break the contacts. - A string-operated switch to open and close the contacts (would run up the antenna mast). Any comments or suggestions? 73 - Kristinn, TF3KX Dunno.. I used to use 24 volt relays that normally are used for fan motors, etc, but I never fed at a high voltage point. I did run a lot of power though. They always worked fine, but who knows with a real high potential.. Might arc over.. I've heard tell of one kinda weird method that supposably will work. I've never tried it though. You run a line of coax from that open point on the antenna, to the shack, and use a switch on the end of the coax to open and close. Like I say, I've never tried it myself, so it' may or may not work... MK |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Hans Remeeus wrote: For example Titanex (www.titanex.de) sells good High Power Ceramics Relais for this purpose: http://www.titanex.de/frames/acc.html#UB6-9 (HPRL) with power handling of 5 kW each. Palstar in the US use high power relais in some of theire antenna tuners, but those relays are not ceramic. Good luck! I would say good luck also if I assumed a relay could actually be rated for a certain number of "kW". A relay that easily takes 50kW in a 50 ohm system could fail at 100 watts in an application like this, so it is foolish to even look at power ratings in other applications. In this case when the relay is open he will have very high voltages across the contacts even with very modest power. When the relay is closed he will have a few amps of current at low power up to 5 or 10 amps at kilowatt levels. Not only will he have high voltage between contacts, he will have high voltages from the contact to ground. That virtually excludes conventional relays, and it even excludes many types of vacuum relays. The popular ceramic vacuum relays normally have too low of coil to contact breakdown plus the terninal spacing is much less than 1/2 inch. He probably can get by with a conventional ceramic vacuum relay like an RJ1A (about $50 US surplus) at low power levels (normally considered a "5kW relay, whatever that means) , but if he runs more than a few hundred watts and especially if there is moisture in the air he will need a HV glass vacuum with opposing terminals for contacts and a long insulation bar on the transfer solenoid bar. Power levels depend on the application, and he has picked about the toughest application I can think of. 73 Tom |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Kristinn, I think I would consider the Jennings RJ1A or the Kilovac
HC-1 high speed vacuum relays. I use them in my amp for QSK operation. http://www.mgs4u.com/relay.htm Good luck. Win, W0LZ |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
schreef:
Hans Remeeus wrote: For example Titanex (www.titanex.de) sells good High Power Ceramics Relais for this purpose: http://www.titanex.de/frames/acc.html#UB6-9 (HPRL) with power handling of 5 kW each. Palstar in the US use high power relais in some of theire antenna tuners, but those relays are not ceramic. Good luck! I would say good luck also if I assumed a relay could actually be rated for a certain number of "kW". A relay that easily takes 50kW in a 50 ohm system could fail at 100 watts in an application like this, so it is foolish to even look at power ratings in other applications. In this case when the relay is open he will have very high voltages across the contacts even with very modest power. When the relay is closed he will have a few amps of current at low power up to 5 or 10 amps at kilowatt levels. Not only will he have high voltage between contacts, he will have high voltages from the contact to ground. That virtually excludes conventional relays, and it even excludes many types of vacuum relays. The popular ceramic vacuum relays normally have too low of coil to contact breakdown plus the terninal spacing is much less than 1/2 inch. He probably can get by with a conventional ceramic vacuum relay like an RJ1A (about $50 US surplus) at low power levels (normally considered a "5kW relay, whatever that means) , but if he runs more than a few hundred watts and especially if there is moisture in the air he will need a HV glass vacuum with opposing terminals for contacts and a long insulation bar on the transfer solenoid bar. Power levels depend on the application, and he has picked about the toughest application I can think of. 73 Tom Hello Tom, I know that, but you forgot to quote an important part of my text: "IMHO two high power relays would be an option, about 10 inches seperated from each other." -- 73, Hans Remeeus (PA1HR) http://www.remeeus.eu Communication is about people, the rest is technology. |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Hans Remeeus wrote: Hello Tom, I know that, but you forgot to quote an important part of my text: "IMHO two high power relays would be an option, about 10 inches seperated from each other." That does nothing for breakdown voltages to control cables unless the relays are a certain construction and wired a certain way. It can help with antenna end-to-end breakdown voltage. 73 Tom |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article .com,
"TF3KX" wrote: I am contemplating constructing an antenna where a center-fed HALF WAVE will be bent in a loop, only to be isolated at the almost-touching ends by a relay or some other means of a remotely controlled switch. When the relay contacts are open I will have very high RF voltages between the contacts, probably "a few KV" or even more. Are there any suggestions on where I could find a relay, if any, for this? Or any other means for doing this? I assume that when used on higher frequencies where the antenna is more than 1/2 wave long, the relay contacts are to be closed. If that is what you want to do, and if the higher frequency bands are even multiples of the lower frequency, then you could connect the ends of the 1/2 wave antenna to a shorted 1/4 wave stub made out of open wire. At the lower frequency this would place a very high impedance between the two ends of the antenna, and at even harmonics where the stub would be an integer number of 1/2 waves long, it would place a low impedance between the antenna ends. Cheaper than a relay, too. David, ex-W8EZE -- David Ryeburn To send e-mail, use "ca" instead of "caz". |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Electronic tuning (high voltage varactors) | Homebrew | |||
FA: $9.99 FLUKE 80K-6 HIGH VOLTAGE PROBE in Like-New Shape>ZAP:-) | Equipment | |||
High Voltage Lines.... | Antenna | |||
A Subtle Detail of Reflection Coefficients (but important to know) | Antenna | |||
FS:huge HIGH VOLTAGE transformer for BIG amp! | Boatanchors |