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#1
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Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I
believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? mike |
#2
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In article , mike
writes: Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? You could simple attach the 300-to-75 Ohm matching thing to the long wire and use the coax...provided that the Z-changing-transformer can handle HF. It won't be good if it's just a TV accessory; those seldom go down to 30 MHz. You might check the "300 Ohm" side of the transformer to see if it actually has a DC path across it (an Ohmmeter will show that). Such an accessory doesn't always have a DC path there. If it ain't there, no sense in using it for your application. The long-wire's impedance is going to range all over the place on HF so it won't make much difference to a 75 Ohm coaxial cable feed. Most frequencies will be way off in impedance matching regardless of the ultimate impedance of the receiver. Keeping the coax feedline offers some protection from household QRM that is between receiver and antenna. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
#3
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In article , mike
writes: Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? You could simple attach the 300-to-75 Ohm matching thing to the long wire and use the coax...provided that the Z-changing-transformer can handle HF. It won't be good if it's just a TV accessory; those seldom go down to 30 MHz. You might check the "300 Ohm" side of the transformer to see if it actually has a DC path across it (an Ohmmeter will show that). Such an accessory doesn't always have a DC path there. If it ain't there, no sense in using it for your application. The long-wire's impedance is going to range all over the place on HF so it won't make much difference to a 75 Ohm coaxial cable feed. Most frequencies will be way off in impedance matching regardless of the ultimate impedance of the receiver. Keeping the coax feedline offers some protection from household QRM that is between receiver and antenna. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
#4
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Even if the thing acted as a transformer at HF, I doubt that it would handle
much TX power ... Carl - wk3c "mike" wrote in message ... Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? mike |
#5
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Even if the thing acted as a transformer at HF, I doubt that it would handle
much TX power ... Carl - wk3c "mike" wrote in message ... Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? mike |
#6
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#7
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#8
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Mike,
Due to limited space in the roof - I'm renting so won't risk an external antenna - my setup is similar to this. I use an OCF dipole (some call it a Windom but this is incorrect) with a 300 ohm feedline running to a wallplate in the loungeroom. From there it goes to a 4:1 TV-style balun and into 75 ohm coax. Works quite well. The dipole is in parallel with an existing VHF TV antenna, so it should do well at 20 meters too when I finally decide to play up there. Not sure about your earthing situation, mine didn't need it. The setup looks like this. I'm in Australia if you're worried about the weird orientation: ^ \ North __________________( )_____________ | 10M H 5M | | H | | 4M H 3M | | H | | H H El-Cheapo H 4:1 Balun H 300 ohm {X}=========== ribbon feedline | | 75 ohm | Coax | [SDR-1000] Rob mike wrote: Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? mike |
#9
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Mike,
Due to limited space in the roof - I'm renting so won't risk an external antenna - my setup is similar to this. I use an OCF dipole (some call it a Windom but this is incorrect) with a 300 ohm feedline running to a wallplate in the loungeroom. From there it goes to a 4:1 TV-style balun and into 75 ohm coax. Works quite well. The dipole is in parallel with an existing VHF TV antenna, so it should do well at 20 meters too when I finally decide to play up there. Not sure about your earthing situation, mine didn't need it. The setup looks like this. I'm in Australia if you're worried about the weird orientation: ^ \ North __________________( )_____________ | 10M H 5M | | H | | 4M H 3M | | H | | H H El-Cheapo H 4:1 Balun H 300 ohm {X}=========== ribbon feedline | | 75 ohm | Coax | [SDR-1000] Rob mike wrote: Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? mike |
#10
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Mike,
Due to limited space in the roof - I'm renting so won't risk an external antenna - my setup is similar to this. I use an OCF dipole (some call it a Windom but this is incorrect) with a 300 ohm feedline running to a wallplate in the loungeroom. From there it goes to a 4:1 TV-style balun and into 75 ohm coax. Works quite well. The dipole is in parallel with an existing VHF TV antenna, so it should do well at 2 meters too when I finally decide to play up there. Not sure about your earthing situation, mine didn't need it. The setup looks like this. I'm in Australia if you're worried about the weird orientation: ^ \ North __________________( )_____________ | 10M H 5M | | H | | 4M H 3M | | H | | H H El-Cheapo H 4:1 Balun H 300 ohm {X}=========== ribbon feedline | | 75 ohm | Coax | [SDR-1000] Rob mike wrote: Given I am currently using 75 ohm coax to feed my random wire, I believe I could use a 300 ohm to 75 ohm (4:1) TV twin lead to coax converter and get away with it. Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think I would attach the random wire to one terminal of the 300 ohm input. The other would go directly to earth ground, or via a gas arc tube to ground. On the other side, I would attach my coax cable. To give the coax feeder a ground at the antenna end, I would to open up the converter and solder in a ground wire on the coax sheild terminal. This would kill off common mode currents. This would give my antenna feeder system a matching transformer plus give the antenna a direct path to ground. Theoretically, I am I missing anything? mike |
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