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The DCTL Antenna design is at http://www.n5nw.org/antennas.html
The MFJ magnetic loop antennas are quite expensive and don't cover the low bands. Homebrewing magnetic loop antennas is very tricky due to the need for WELDED connections and special capacitors that can handle thousands of volts. These tricky issues probably explain why magnetic loop antennas are so expensive. (I'm also surprised that MFJ doesn't make a larger version of the magnetic loop antennas for 80m that's perhaps 6 feet wide and long.) The DCTL Antenna is a loop antenna made out of twin lead, and it has received rave reviews. From what I've heard, it performs well compared to other antennas of a similar size. (Obviously, it can't be as good as a full-size loop or dipole.) I believe the DCTL Antenna uses the shorted stub and open stub as loading capacitors. It's not as small as the magnetic loop antennas (4-foot wide square for 40m instead of 3-foot wide loop), but that allows the DCTL to have more radiation resistance (so that welded connections aren't needed). Has anyone here constructed and used a DCTL Antenna? Some questions: 1. How seriously is it affected by nearby metal? I know any antenna is affected, but some are affected less than others. For example, monopoles are affected less by nearby metal. This is why apartment dwellers using a balcony with metal railings are generally advised to use a monopole antenna and use the metal railing as the antenna ground. Mobile antennas are always monopoles instead of dipoles. 2. How do you insulate and reinforce the wires at the feedpoint? I think this could be a mechanical weak spot. Would coax sealer help? Epoxy glue? Perhaps a non-metallic box with holes drilled in for the wires? 3. Could the length of the open stub LC be adjustable to modify the resonant frequency? Perhaps one could put in a connector (Molex, PowerPole, etc.) and then add in a small open stub. Perhaps something similar could be done with the shorted end as well. Perhaps one could add ferrite chokes to electrically (but not mechanically) terminate the stub, as the RF would be mostly on the outer surface of the wires. With these adjustments, it may even be possible to make the antenna multiband. Of course, this would require deviating from the provided formulas. 4. How much feedpoint resistance can one expect from the DCTL? The author suggests using a 6:1 balun. So it sounds like the DCTL Antenna should be about 300 ohms. 300 ohms is about the characteristic impedance of twin lead. But I thought that smaller antennas normally have feedpoint resistances WELL BELOW 50 ohms, which is an even farther cry from 300 ohms. Or do those stubs work as a matching network as well? Jason Hsu, AG4DG personal AAAATTTT jasonhsu.com http://www.jasonhsu.com/ee.html http://groups.yahoo.com/group/eeham/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/resume...tion_fighters/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/gmu-ece-control |
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