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Hello Mungo,
I'd say the first part rates a C-, mostly for credit in summarizing a great deal of material. But did you say that the input impedance of a quarter-wave vertical antenna at 30 MHz is 100 ohms without a counterpoise? NO ground return path at all? Sorry, but I think maybe you have fallen prey to Roger's "magic." Your understanding of what the 23' antenna is and how it works is sadly wanting. It also does not comport with the material in the earlier paragraphs. You have not even hinted at the sleight-of-hand introduction of an antenna tuner and why it is needed, and you have introduced an antenna without any mention of an RF return path! You are posting to a newsgroup where the readers are generally familiar with the 23' whip and the need for an antenna tuner and an RF return path. Do yourself a favor: find a book on antennas and read it. An elementary text is a good place to start. And in regard to the excluded middle, I think I understand now why you have not found it. Regards, Chuck Mungo Bulge wrote: I have to agree with Chucky on at least one point. The postings on this thread are humorous. That must be frustrating to those who were trying to follow the thread in the hope of learning something useful. The reason I find it amusing is that both the con's and the pro's are to some extent correct in their reasoning all be it flowed to one extent or the other. As I am really old and lacking any substantial short-term memory, re-reading the entire thread to glean every single nuance of every attempted point would be counter productive for me because I would probably forget what I was doing. I will however make some assumption, which I will hold true, for the sake of simplicity. By the way Chucky, the proper use of reduction to the absurd (reductio ad absurdum) logic would require a model theory which is based on the law of excluded middle (tertium non datur) which clearly does not apply to the statements put forth in this thread. My assumptions: 1. The usual antenna system used with marine transmitters in the intermediate and high-frequency bands is the Marconi or grounded radiator, in contrast to the Hertz or ungrounded radiator. Technically the most basic of antenna, it is an "isotropic radiator". This is a mythical antenna, which radiates in all directions, as does the light from a lamp bulb. This assumption is somewhat modified by assumption #5 below, as a reflection (pardon the witticism) of reality. 2. Depending upon height above ground, the influence of surrounding objects and other factors, our quarter wave antenna with a near perfect ground exhibits a nominal input impedance of around 36 ohms. 3. Ground losses affect the feed point impedance and antenna efficiency. When mounted on a real ground, the input impedance can range from 38 ohms for a well-designed antenna mounted over a specially prepared ground, to over 100 ohms for a Marconi mounted above poor, unprepared ground that has no radials. 4. Ground loss reduces the antenna's efficiency, because part of the power being delivered to the antenna is being dissipated in the ground rather than being radiated. The efficiency can be computed from the measured value of input resistance by using the formula; Efficiency equals 36 ohms divided by antenna impedance. 5. The radiation pattern of the Marconi antenna is a half doughnut. There is no radiation straight up in the direction of the antenna. The bulk of the radiation occurs at a low elevation angle, which is what is needed to launch a ground wave. 6. Finally yet importantly, the HF installation shall be used for communications in excess of line of sight. In other words, the skipper will want this installation to work when s/he needs to contact S&R in a life-threatening situation, not just to collect the email while birthed in some marina. Ok, now the model part. This antenna is to be mounted on a boat. So what is all this talk about ground? Well let us look at the Marconi antenna. It is actually one half of a dipole antenna. Trust me on this, explaining why and how will just get us lost, but the other half of the dipole is needed and is provided by the image produced by the previous mentioned ground. There is that word ground again. Now Chucky, this is were some clarification needs to be. This is not the same ground we all have come to know and love when we talk about the ground in an electrical system like your house (safety ground), your car (negative return) or your boat (negative return) this is terra firma, real honest to goodness dry land, and for the time being we will assume its perfect. Now, by perfect I don't mean a perfect conductor, hell it's not even close. By perfect I mean a low impedance to RF currents. The RF ground currents are greatest in the vicinity of the feed point at the base of the antenna up to a distance of ¼ wave length from the antenna. Now we all know there isn't any perfect ground left, the Aztecs used it all to build their pyramids. So how do we make it perfect or at least acceptable, we install a counterpoise, a conductor or system of conductors used as a substitute for perfect ground in an antenna system. That's were Me's radials or RF ground system comes in. It should have the effective radius equal to the height of the antenna (1/4 wave length). I say should have, but in reality the radials do not all have to be the same length and that losses may be decreased by adding extra radials near the feed point. These extra radials can be as short as 1/40 wave length and still be effective. Now, with this added counterpoise, you can pick up this antenna and move it anywhere and it will still function very well with a relatively high efficiency. That's a new term I snuck in without you seeing it coming. Cool! Remember assumption #2 above? I said a Marconi had an input impedance of 36 ohms on perfect ground, well it turns out that with a counterpoise it has an impedance of 38 ohms. Trust me, it does. Now let's drag this sucker over to the marina and hoist it onto that boat we have all been talking about. We get it mounted, counterpoise and all. Not easy considering its size. A Marconi antenna for a 2 MHz system is 117 feet high (234/2) with a 117 foot diameter counterpoise. Big sucker isn't it? How are we going to keep the counterpoise level? We're not. Let's let it droop, say 45 degrees. I'm cheating here. Some of you may know that a Marconi with a counterpoise set at a 45 degree down slop has an input impedance of 50 ohms and just by chance, that exactly matched the radio set's output impedance, thus maximum RF power transfer between antenna and radio. Cool! However, the antenna's efficiency has dropped to 72% and we have this honking big antenna messing up the aesthetics of our nice boat. Let's scale it down. Instead of 2 MHz, let's go to the other end of the band to 30 MHz. That makes the antenna 7.8 feet high with a 7.8 foot radius counterpoise. Before you start screaming about my math, I allow for a "velocity factor" of 5%. It's not as big, but it's still ugly and we need more power to be able to raise S&R when need them. For aesthetics, let's drop the counterpoise. What happens? The antenna's impedance goes up to about 100 ohms and its efficiency drops to 36%, but that isn't the worst of it, the power transfer is not maximum because the impedances are not matched. The reflective coefficient will be 0.3333 ((100-50)/50)/((100+50)/50), thus a VSWR of 2.0, a return loss of 9.5 dB which means the power actually reaching the antenna is 11.1% so now I can't reach S&R and I'm going down. Me is thinking "I'm vindicated" and Chucky is thinking "Another nut case". You're both right. So why does it work, simple. The antenna isn't a Marconi; it's an industry standard Marine HF band antenna, 2-30 MHz bandwidth, 10.8 MHz resonant frequency, 23 feet high and when connected to an HF radio set configured to its manufacturer's specifications it will perform admirably. If that were not the case, we would have had to have had at the very least five quarter wave Marconi antennae ranging in height from 7.8 to 117 feet and we don't. That Chucky is the proper use of reductio ad absurdum logic. "chuck" wrote in message ink.net... | Well Bruce/Me, I think you need to pull your two "selves" together! | | Sifting through the humorous postings, I think your bottom line is that | HF/MF vertical antennas will not work well (sometimes I think you mean | will not work at all) unless they are (1) over sal****er with a return | path capacitively coupled to the sea (at least for nonmetallic vessels); | or (2) over land with 100 quarter-wave radials in marshland. | | You have labored to persuade us that less-than-perfect marine RF ground | systems are certain to disappoint. | | It will surprise you, perhaps, to learn that there are many thousands of | vertical HF and MF transmitting antennas in operation in the world today | that satisfy none of those conditions, and yet enable effective | communications activities. Some on land and some over water. These | installations are supported by rigorous theory as well as by on-the-air | performance data. | | If you would like to learn more about how this is being done, often with | losses of only a few dB below ideal conditions, drop in at | rec.amateur.radio.antenna and "read the mail." You'll find some | bombastic assertions and opinions to be sure, but also many reasoned | analyses and even quantitative experiments. Hope to see you there, Bruce. | | Regards, | | Chuck | | | | | | | | Bruce in Alaska wrote: | In article , | Me wrote: | | | In article .com, | "Skip Gundlach" wrote: | | | As further background, we have full rails, with the gates combined | electrically with brass straps belowdecks, attached to the arch, the | pushpit and pulpit. We have about 110 lineal feet of 1" SS tube rail, | unless you count the inner rails, plus the arch. In addition we have | the standard 4" copper strapping leading to a sintered bronze Guest | plane below the boat, and also connected to a 3x5' plate under the | workbench top. I think we have a reasonably good ground. | | You will never know if you have a "reasonably good ground", unless | you get yourself an Impedance Bridge, and check it at the frequencies | that you commonly work. Anything that is more than 12" away from the | water, isn't going to add "diddley-squat" toward building a Low Impedance | Wideband RF Ground System, and anyone who tells you otherwise, is just as | uneducated about MF/HF Marine Radio Antenna Systems, as you seem to be. | I have seen all kinds of Systems that looked very impresive, untill they | were evaluated with real insurmentation. 400 Sq Ft of Copper Screen in | the Cabin Overhead was proffered, as a really good RF Ground, by a well | known Boat Builder, 20 years ago. It didn't work any better than | having nothing at all, when tested, in a real radio enviorment. If | you got a Plastic Hull, you are NEVER going to get a Real RF Ground, | UNLESS the hull builder was smart, (they never are) and put 200+ Sq | Ft of screen under the gellcoat down by the keel. Cellulose hulls | are just as bad, and harder to retrofit that Plastic ones. | Like I said in my first reply, Autotuners were invented to allow any | "Dufus" to think he install an MF/HF Marine Radio System, and save | himself all that money he would have paid a Compitant Radioman. | SGC Autotuners are some of the worst of the lot, even if they did steal | the design from the real inventers. SGC couldn't even copy the design | correctly, and "Old PeeAir" couldn't design his way out of a "Wet Paper | Bag". | | Me | | | Geeze Louise "Me" give the guy a break...... He was just asking for | an opinion.... | | | Bruce in alaska |
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