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#1
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A coil-loaded counterpoise at a low height above ground is used to
provide an artificial ground for an antenna when, for some reason, a true ground connection is not possible or there is not enough space to erect a full 1/4-wavelength horizontal wire. The principal effects of low height are a loss resistance induced in the wire from the ground, and a reduction in propagation velocity along the wire. A counterpoise can be considered to be an artificial ground. Its input resistance at resonance is equivalent to the input resistance of a true ground connection but its resistance will never be as low as a good ground. To provide a lower input resistance three or four counterpoises can be used in parallel. Or they can be resonant on different bands. New program C_POISE estimates the performance of a single coil-loaded counterpoise. The number of turns on a coil of given length and diameter needed to resonate a low wire to 1/4-wave resonance is calculated. The input resistance at resonance is also estimated.. All program output data is approximate due to the very low height of the wire above ground and uncertainty in the characteristics of the soil or whatever other materials may be under the wire. The wire may be allowed to rest on the ground surface but uncertainty will be at a maximum. It will nearly always be needed to prune the wire length for resonance. Or when the wire length is fixed the coil turns may need adjustment. When wire height exceeds wire length accuracy is much improved. Input resistance at resonance will be fairly small. Working Q will be high and the counterpoise will behave as a short antenna. For precise resonance the wire will still need pruning. Download program C_POISE in a few seconds from website below and run immediately. ---- .................................................. .......... Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.btinternet.com/~g4fgq.regp .................................................. .......... |
#2
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A coil-loaded counterpoise at a low height above ground is used to
provide an artificial ground for an antenna when, for some reason, a true ground connection is not possible or there is not enough space to erect a full 1/4-wavelength horizontal wire. The principal effects of low height are a loss resistance induced in the wire from the ground, and a reduction in propagation velocity along the wire. A counterpoise can be considered to be an artificial ground. Its input resistance at resonance is equivalent to the input resistance of a true ground connection but its resistance will never be as low as a good ground. To provide a lower input resistance three or four counterpoises can be used in parallel. Or they can be resonant on different bands. New program C_POISE estimates the performance of a single coil-loaded counterpoise. The number of turns on a coil of given length and diameter needed to resonate a low wire to 1/4-wave resonance is calculated. The input resistance at resonance is also estimated.. All program output data is approximate due to the very low height of the wire above ground and uncertainty in the characteristics of the soil or whatever other materials may be under the wire. The wire may be allowed to rest on the ground surface but uncertainty will be at a maximum. It will nearly always be needed to prune the wire length for resonance. Or when the wire length is fixed the coil turns may need adjustment. When wire height exceeds wire length accuracy is much improved. Input resistance at resonance will be fairly small. Working Q will be high and the counterpoise will behave as a short antenna. For precise resonance the wire will still need pruning. ======================= Reg , What is your opinion about the effectiveness of (a) counter poise(s) of any length in series with an adjustable series resonance circuit ,adjusted for maximum RF current at the operating frequency ? Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH |
#3
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Reg , What is your opinion about the effectiveness of (a) counter
poise(s) of any length in series with an adjustable series resonance circuit ,adjusted for maximum RF current at the operating frequency ? Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH =========================================== Frank, the effectiveness of a counterpoise depends on its input resistance. The lower this resistance better it is. It is the 'ground' connection for the antenna. (And the transmitter). But there's no point in making it longer than 1/4-wave. This increases coupling with the ground, increases loss resistance and also undesirably increases radiation resistance. The counterpoise then behaves more like a very low antenna. When it is 1/2-wavelength long it has a very high input resistance and is entirely non-effective. It may just as well not be there. At some lengths the loading coil would have to be replaced with a loading capacitor. Remember, the antenna wire plus counterpoise is behaving as an off-centre fed, bent, dipole with the lower section being very near to the lossy ground. (Whatever the ground is). We don't want the lower section to be TOO long. The current into the counterpoise is the same current as is entering the antenna. If there is an antenna tuning unit it will tune up the counterpoise simultaneously with the antenna. They behave together as one thing! So there is no point in having a separate tuner just for the counterpoise. Maximum current flows into the counterpoise at the same time as it flows into the antenna proper. The purpose of the loading coil in the counterpoise is to provide a low impedance connection to the braid of the coaxial feedline. If there is no feedline then it provides an artificial 'ground' for the transmitter plus tuner. And all the foregoing arises because it is difficult or impossible for the station owner to provide a set of buried ground radials. ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
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