Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

All wave and High efficiency antennas
#2

Fact is: That antenna to be most efficient must be resonant. That does not work well for a general coverage receiver. A resonant antenna will have a specific impedance at the feed point that is or can be made to match common feed line. Matched to a feedline that line is resistant to interference. A matching device at the receiver for the line impedance must also be broadband...

There are commercial receiver antennas that will do this. The issue would be matching at the receiver.

The overall antenna as a system will be noise free all along the feedline but not at the antenna. Noise can still enter there.

FWIR RCA used a design called the spider web antenna. A delta matched dipole that was feed by 72 ohm twisted pair. One such model did not need the heavy center balun (heavy as it was in a porcelain housing). The "normal feed impedance of a dipole is 72 ohm, the feed line can be a pair of 14-18 ga. stranded, insulated wire twisted 1 turn in two inches.

Some 30's - 40's era radios included provision for the balanced antenna. Ready for such a feedline. The Delta system has several extended legs that assist in managing the shortwave bands. For BC overall, the antenna serves as loading and the feedline does some reception if one leg is connected to ground.

IMHO the use of baluns for BC will introduce loss and unexpected resonances. I think a more than adequate BC/shortwave antenna is an easy afternoon project costing only for the wire & insulators.

Do not neglect the lightning protection, can be homemade.

YMMV

Chas

Pliny the younger
“nihil novum nihil varium nihil quod non semel spectasse sufficiat”


Messages In This Thread
RE: All wave and High efficiency antennas - by Chas - 03-23-2020, 08:29 PM



Users browsing this thread: 4 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Atwater-Kent 84, restoration.
Hello mike, What nice looking radio I have one AK in my collection it's a console I have not started restoring it yet ....radiorich — 11:21 PM
91H Code 126 Restore
Just to make it more confusing here is another model 91 schematic that doesn't show parts with dotted lines in that spot...Arran — 10:37 PM
Atwater-Kent 84, restoration.
The wires were desoldered from the can, and the capacitors checked. All checked at 0.102 uF, which is correct. So the c...morzh — 09:41 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Arran Yours probably then the H speaker, same as mine.morzh — 08:39 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Mike; I would like to have a look at the speaker in my model 96, but the set is packed into a corner in the basement. ...Arran — 08:04 PM
91H Code 126 Restore
Thanks Arran, I'm convinced the power cord is good but have a nice repro plug for it. Would it be prudent to add a fus...RealRider — 07:28 PM
91H Code 126 Restore
As I was studying this schematic I was wondering what does this dotted line means?  I haven't traced it out yet. An o...RealRider — 07:22 PM
91H Code 126 Restore
When it comes to the cloth covered power cords, if they are not frayed, and are flexible, and if I can bend one without ...Arran — 06:21 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Could be. The central cylinder is OK, but the sides are...well. What's done is done. I wonder if some standard bobbine w...morzh — 06:02 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Mike; As I was saying it doesn't look like they used much of a bobbin for the field coil, not like a Magnavox one wou...Arran — 05:49 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 5554 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 5553 Guest(s)
Avatar

>