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Re: [TowerTalk] Hairpin Match Calculator

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Hairpin Match Calculator
From: Brian Beezley <k6sti@att.net>
Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2024 03:09:25 -0800
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
"NEC does use a simplified model for the "wire" - it takes into account dielectrics and skin effect (I'm in the middle of figuring out what ZINT does, which is the core of the "resistance and inductance of a segment", so I can make a Python version that's not just a copy of the Fortran)."


Jim, carefully check the NEC resistance calculations. Many years ago a knowledgeable German ham found an error and brought it to the attention of some NEC person. He was never happy with the acknowledgment he received. I assume the correction made its way into the code, but I never checked.

I found a free FEM program (code free, help costs) but it looks like a big effort to get it going. Not sure it's worth the trouble just for the boom problem.

A benefit of writing the hairpin code is that I'm now aware of subtle magnetic interactions everywhere. Some not so subtle.

For the hairpin Q calculation, I had been meaning to check loop radiation resistance. I finally got around to it yesterday. Radiation loss is below 1% of conductor loss for most designs, but I did find a few cases where it was 5-10%, and one case where it was 13% for a 2-meter hairpin. More significant than I expected. So I added the code and posted a new version. I did the same thing to my coil program for a better comparison of coil and hairpin losses. I always wondered whether a large, efficient coil that replaced a hairpin might radiate, but so far I haven't found a case where the loss is anything but tiny.

Brian

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