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#1
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I've been reading up on baluns, boy is there a lot of conflicting
information. OK, so I read there's a voltage balun and a current balun, and supposedly what I want for a quad antenna is a current balun.. anyone have a favorite site that'll give me the clues to making one? I saw one page, they showed a ring with a piece of coax wrapped in different directions on each side of the ring.. is this ideal, or close to it? I assume I want a ferrite ring big enough to get the coax through, or can I use a plain iron or steel ring? This is going to be for a sideband CB, I'll probably never run more power than the stock base.. What about the coax wrapped around a piece of PVC? is this worth the 20 or so feet of coax or just a waste? The beginner has too much information with no clues as to what is good and what isn't.. Thanks all, John |
#2
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John, Here is a really great site with plenty of info on quads. Good
luck. http://www.signalengineering.com/ultimate/ Kirk JohnM wrote: I've been reading up on baluns, boy is there a lot of conflicting information. OK, so I read there's a voltage balun and a current balun, and supposedly what I want for a quad antenna is a current balun.. anyone have a favorite site that'll give me the clues to making one? I saw one page, they showed a ring with a piece of coax wrapped in different directions on each side of the ring.. is this ideal, or close to it? I assume I want a ferrite ring big enough to get the coax through, or can I use a plain iron or steel ring? This is going to be for a sideband CB, I'll probably never run more power than the stock base.. What about the coax wrapped around a piece of PVC? is this worth the 20 or so feet of coax or just a waste? The beginner has too much information with no clues as to what is good and what isn't.. Thanks all, John |
#3
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Kirk Hochburger wrote:
John, Here is a really great site with plenty of info on quads. Good luck. http://www.signalengineering.com/ultimate/ Kirk Great, thank you. I've got that site bookmarked, I don't remember much if anything on baluns there though. John |
#4
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John:
This page gives a reasonable explanation of the differences between voltage and current baluns--you will generally wish to use the current balun. Voltage baluns count on the antenna being perfectly balanced to function well--a situation not generally encountered in CB. For example, a voltage balun could be used on a simple 1/2 wave dipole to prevent transmission line currents from flowing--however, if one end of the dipole is nearer a tree, drainpipe, ground, etc--it would serve to unbalance the antenna (more or less depending on proximity to the object... So, generally stick to using the current balun when using one in an attempt to prevent transmission line currents, you will have much better results over the voltage balun--generally... John On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 07:25:19 -0400, JohnM wrote: I've been reading up on baluns, boy is there a lot of conflicting information. OK, so I read there's a voltage balun and a current balun, and supposedly what I want for a quad antenna is a current balun.. anyone have a favorite site that'll give me the clues to making one? I saw one page, they showed a ring with a piece of coax wrapped in different directions on each side of the ring.. is this ideal, or close to it? I assume I want a ferrite ring big enough to get the coax through, or can I use a plain iron or steel ring? This is going to be for a sideband CB, I'll probably never run more power than the stock base.. What about the coax wrapped around a piece of PVC? is this worth the 20 or so feet of coax or just a waste? The beginner has too much information with no clues as to what is good and what isn't.. Thanks all, John |
#5
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John:
Sorry, forgot to include the URL explaining the differences: http://home.tiscali.ch/hb9abx/currentbalun.htm John On Thu, 15 Sep 2005 20:50:10 -0700, John Smith wrote: John: This page gives a reasonable explanation of the differences between voltage and current baluns--you will generally wish to use the current balun. Voltage baluns count on the antenna being perfectly balanced to function well--a situation not generally encountered in CB. For example, a voltage balun could be used on a simple 1/2 wave dipole to prevent transmission line currents from flowing--however, if one end of the dipole is nearer a tree, drainpipe, ground, etc--it would serve to unbalance the antenna (more or less depending on proximity to the object... So, generally stick to using the current balun when using one in an attempt to prevent transmission line currents, you will have much better results over the voltage balun--generally... John On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 07:25:19 -0400, JohnM wrote: I've been reading up on baluns, boy is there a lot of conflicting information. OK, so I read there's a voltage balun and a current balun, and supposedly what I want for a quad antenna is a current balun.. anyone have a favorite site that'll give me the clues to making one? I saw one page, they showed a ring with a piece of coax wrapped in different directions on each side of the ring.. is this ideal, or close to it? I assume I want a ferrite ring big enough to get the coax through, or can I use a plain iron or steel ring? This is going to be for a sideband CB, I'll probably never run more power than the stock base.. What about the coax wrapped around a piece of PVC? is this worth the 20 or so feet of coax or just a waste? The beginner has too much information with no clues as to what is good and what isn't.. Thanks all, John |
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