Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello Gary:
Seems I've simply lost the ability to communicate any more. My point was that seeking the most efficient antenna (as defined by maximum power transfer into space) ought not to be the guiding principle. We want maximum power delivered to the other station. All other things the same, a higher radiation resistance would mean lower ohmic losses. But all other things are not the same when antenna length is increased. Yes, radiation patterns on real boats will differ from radiation patterns in space. But even on a real boat, a high percentage of energy is radiated at quite high angles when the antenna is a half-wavelength. Yes, the half-wave will be more "efficient" in getting energy off the boat because the radiation resistance is higher than with a shorter antenna. But if it doesn't get the signal to the other station because the radiation angle is too high, then it's not really optimal. Look at some numbers on vertical radiation patterns. You can easily lose 6 db at useful, low radiation angles by going from a quarter-wave to a hslf-wave. There is no way you'll ever recover that through the half-wave's higher radiation resistance, although that high-angle stuff could actually be a good thing if you're not in the middle of the Pacific trying to work Europe. And we have not even addressed the consequences of a sloping antenna on both horizontal and vertical patterns. No quarrel, of course, with your observation that as the length of an antenna falls below a quarter-wave, the radiation resistance (and thus radiated efficiency) falls. Those losses are one of the parameters that one needs to weigh against other considerations. At the same time, a reduction of length to say, .2 wavelengths would probably not even be detectable (i.e., 1 dB). Also, even as the length decreases, the radiation pattern remains basically that of a quarter-wave antenna. I probably need to repeat that I have not advocated "shorter" antennas, "longer" antennas, quarter-wave antennas, half-wave antennas, vertical antennas, horizontal antennas or much of anthing other than an analysis of the desired signal paths and the basing of an antenna design and frequency combination on that analysis. Well, I have also cautioned against blindly increasing antenna length. Sort of struck me as a motherhood kind of thing. Onward . . . Chuck Gary Schafer wrote: As Bruce says, "tuners get very lossy with short antennas". But that is not the only problem with short antennas. The antenna and ground system become very lossy with short antennas. Below 1/4 wavelength the radiation resistance of the antenna drops drastically. It can be less than an ohm. That equates to very high losses. The antenna system in those cases may be only a few percent efficient. It is far better to have a longer antenna that gives a much higher radiation resistance even if it may not be the optimum length as far as radiation pattern is concerned. If you can't get the power to the antenna the radiation pattern doesn't much matter. You still won't get out very well. On a typical boat the radiation pattern is going to be far from ideal with whatever length antenna you have due to all the surrounding objects on the boat. The difference in radiation patterns between a 1/2 wavelength and 5/8 wavelength antennas are minimal. About the only real difference is the feed point impedance they present. As far as antennas greater in length than a quarter wavelength, they start to produce multiple lobes in the pattern. Which on a boat may not be a bad thing. As you mention, sometimes higher angles are desired depending on the distance trying to be covered. A longer antenna on a typical boat is most always going to be more efficient than a short antenna even if the longer antenna produces multiple pattern lobes. Regards Gary On Tue, 09 Nov 2004 00:29:53 GMT, Chuck wrote: Antennas are really a lot like boats: No boat will do everything well and no antenna will either. Boats and antennas that try to do everything usually fail across the board. FWIW, SGC-237, -230, and -231 tuners need 23 feet only to tune from 1.6 MHz to 3.3 MHz. Above 3.3 MHz, these SGC tuners require only eight (8) feet. The Icom AH-4, for example, needs 23 feet only to tune down to 3.5 MHz, but will tune from 7 MHz up with Icom's AH-2b whip (8.2 feet long). But it doesn't matter what lengths the tuners require if there is no desire to operate in that frequency range, and chances are excellent that recreational boaters will not be found at the very low frequencies. As has been pointed out, some antenna lengths will be more taxing for an autotuner than other lengths. Your objective is not to make life easier for your tuner, especially when doing so may move you farther from your real needs. You may not even need a tuner! Your objective is to achieve your communication goals. You might give some thought to posting on one of the cruising newsgroups to ask experienced cruisers for their thoughts on things like "if you had only one frequency to operate on, what would it be? Among other things, that might be the basis for an antenna you can stow for emergencies. But tell them where and how you'll be cruising and what you want the ssb for (email, emergencies, boat-to-boat communication, etc.) Then return to the antenna design questions. Keep to it! Chuck |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
SSB Antenna theory | Electronics | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Cruising | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Electronics | |||
mixing and matching devices with boats 9/16 inch antenna connector | Electronics | |||
How to use a simple SWR meter and what it means to your VHF | Electronics |