To: | topband@contesting.com |
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Subject: | Topband: Question Re: Coax Shield vs. Ground. |
From: | Bill Tippett <btippett@alum.mit.edu> |
Date: | Fri, 29 Dec 2006 09:16:17 -0500 |
List-post: | <mailto:topband@contesting.com> |
W8JI wrote: >> We really don't want the coax shield having a direct path to the ground the antenna uses. The ground for the antenna and the antenna should never connect to the coax. AA6VB replied: >How do we isolate the coax shield from the radial system? My coax goes from the amp output to the input of my balun. One of the balun outputs goes to the radiator and the other to the radials. Is that what you had in mind? And does it matter which of the two outputs from the balun go to the radiator and the radials? W8JI responded: >I'm specifically talking about receiving systems. An isolation transformer is cheap and easy, and since most receiving antennas have poor grounds or no grounds, they should never be tied into the coax shield...which would allow common mode currents to pass. I just can't imagine why anyone would build a receiving system where the coax can contribute signal to the receiving antenna through a shield-to-antenna path. >In transmitting systems elevated radials should never have a ground path. Grounding elevated radials reduces efficiency. Bob and Tom, I think two thoughts are getting mixed together here...RX antennas and TX antennas. I agree with Tom above about RX transformers. A simple check for this is to make sure the low side of both the Hi-Z and Lo-Z outputs is isolated. If shorted, as with a tapped trifilar winding, then you should either go to a binocular core (easiest) or to a quadrifilar winding on a toroid where the trifilar Hi-Z winding is isolated from the 4th Lo-Z winding (but much more difficult to construct than using a binocular core). See a binocular core transformer on Tom's website below (photo near bottom of webpage): http://www.w8ji.com/core_selection.htm With elevated radials in a TX antenna, you also need to isolate them from the coax shield. Most use a current balun at the feedpoint for this which prevents RF from flowing outside the coax shield and thus interfering with the performance of the elevated radials. BTW ferrite sleeves can also be used on the receiving antenna coax as Tom explains below, but the best solution is an isolated transformer at the feedpoint which prevents RF from ever reaching the outside of the coax (as Tom said in his first response above). http://www.w8ji.com/common-mode_noise.htm Hopefully this helps clarify the two separate ideas (RX and TX) being presented. 73 & HNY! Bill W4ZV _______________________________________________ Topband mailing list Topband@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/topband |
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