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On Fri, 28 May 2004 18:58:25 -0400, "Jack Painter" wrote:
good stuff by Meindert snipped Thanks very much, that was a lightbulb going off (duh) that the backstay on less than a 70' yacht is going to have a seriously short antenna WRT wavelength! My wires and dipole are of course half wave devices and at desired frequencies do not even require a tuner at all. And yes I do use a 1:1 Balun (isolation only on the tunes dipole, 4:1 on random wires). And just because the specs of my Sunair Coupler _could_ deal with any wire 30' or longer, that would be a frivolous effort to try to tune, say 2182khz on so short a wire with 50ohm coax. It does work mediocre on an 80' wire but I am still somewhat surprised that any sailing vessel could get much performance (if any do) on MF from a (relatively short) backstay antenna. Closer to the 1/2 wavelength, I would think that coax would be more appropriate to the ATU-to-Antenna match than this GTO-15. Correct? And a 4:1 balun would in other cases make the match even more feasable, as well as the desirable electrical isolation from noise that a Balun can provide. 73 Jack Painter Virginia Beach, Va Jack, I too wonder about the matching of (short) backstay HF antennas. The thing that occurs to me is that trying to match the ATU to the antenna isn't really the goal. The ATU *IS* the matching network. By feeding the backstay with a coax, the excess capacitance (due to the coax) is just another reactance the ATU must try to "tune out". Using coax is equivalent to conncting shunt capacitors from there to ground. My opinion is that the lead, whatever it is, between the ATU and the *real* antenna, becomes part of the antenna. To me it makes sense to use something like GTO-15 between the ATU and backstay. We also must remember that matching the ATU to the backstay is only part of the job. The ATU must present a proper impedance to the transceiver. If the antenna is a horrible match, and the ATU runs out of "range", then the impedance presented to the transceiver must suffer also. Be nice to put a network analyzer on a backstay and see what it really looks like, eh? Be an opportunity to experiment with different grounding schemes also. I'm convinced that salt water is the best possible ground....coupling/connecting to it is the challange. My 2-bits worth... Norm B |
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