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Re: [TenTec] was OT: Indoor Antenna: re B&W type terminated dipoles

To: tentec@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TenTec] was OT: Indoor Antenna: re B&W type terminated dipoles
From: "Dr. Gerald N. Johnson" <geraldj@weather.net>
Reply-to: geraldj@weather.net, Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Date: Sat, 04 Dec 2010 07:57:05 -0600
List-post: <tentec@contesting.com">mailto:tentec@contesting.com>

On 12/3/2010 11:04 PM, Rick - NJ0IP / DJ0IP wrote:
> OK Stuart.  I guess what I have gleaned from yours and Jerry's post is, in
> the case of a Beverage or similar RX antenna, it is both a DC and RF ground.
>
> I have always been leery of running an antenna which needed a terminating
> resistor for transmitting, but I have used Beverages for nearly half my ham
> life (almost a quarter century) and I know that they work very well.
>
> The last question that remains to be answered is, when you consider the
> merits of a Rhombic antenna, even though it is terminated and you might lose
> half your radiated power, the forward gain and low angle of radiation still
> make it a very useful antenna.

Part of that computation is flawed because the simple computations used 
neglect the reduction in current from radiation along the wire. The 
longer the rhombic the less current reaches the end. K0EMS had a stack 
of four extremely long rhombics for 2m EME, something like 680 feet per 
leg and he found it was always unidirectional whether terminated or not.

Then there's the famous LaPort Rhombic that has a pair of assymetrical 
rhombics with 5 and 7 wavelength legs. LaPort was an antenna expert at 
Bell Labs. He designed the original for few side lobes based on simple 
math in the 1950s and built it for overseas HF phone traffic for 5 MHz 
(IIRC) and checked the pattern by flying an airplane and based the gain 
claim of 27 dBd on the width and height of that main lobe. It worked for 
AT&T. Its been in many VHF handbooks ever since. About ten years ago at 
a Central States VHF conference there was a 1296 version tested at an 
antenna gain measurement or contest. Came in at 17 dBd. The next year I 
published an article in the CSVHF prodeedings titled, "Where's the other 
ten dB?" With modern antenna analysis software like NEC based EZNEC, it 
turned out that while the near side lobes in the horizontal and vertical 
planes were reduced, there were huge sidelobes (in free space) in the 
pattern at 45 degrees from the horizontal and vertical planes less than 
10 dB down. I had the EZNEC make a file of signal powers over the whole 
sphere and I wrote software to total them up outside the main lobe. I 
found 90% of the power fed was radiated in the myriad of side and back 
lobes including those four diagonal lobes. Which stands to reason when 
you look at the full radiation pattern from a long wire that has 
concentric cones in free space. You can only line up an array of such 
wires to emphasis or cancel the first lobes, but there can be a couple 
per wavelength of wire length. So I'm not a fan of a huge rhombic.
>
> I don't think I would mind a termination resistor in that case.
> Where I have a problem is with antennas like the T2FD antenna.
>
> 73
> Rick
>
>
I thought I've seen data on the T2FD as made by B&W that at some 
frequencies in its rated range the efficiency is only 5% so the dummy 
load has to be taking more like 95% of the applied power unless the wire 
is dissipating some of that applied power.

73, Jerry, K0CQ
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