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Re: Topband: Covered /bare antennn wire

To: "Mike Waters" <mikewate@gmail.com>, "topband" <topband@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: Topband: Covered /bare antennn wire
From: "Tom W8JI" <w8ji@w8ji.com>
Reply-to: Tom W8JI <w8ji@w8ji.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2012 19:09:15 -0500
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
From my own exhaustive research and many lab experiments with HV corona
discharge, it seems to me that at least some of this could be eliminated by
either:

1. Eliminating all the sharp points

That's one reason why car antennas had round balls on the tips. Take it off and drive 70 MPH in dry air with old rubber tires, and listen to the radio.

2. Properly covering all the sharp points with suitable insulation such as
heat shrink or vinyl caps.

I'm not saying that a high Yagi has to be dipped in a heavy coating of
liquid plastic to eliminate corona (but that sure ought to accomplish
that!). Just cover the ends and joints and the other points where a charge can build up a strong enough field to initiate a discharge to the air, etc.

That definitely helps.

It takes an enormous voltage to get a corona discharge from, say, the side
of a length of smooth, bare metal tubing (with insulated ends) such as even
very small Yagis are made from. For example, my own research shows that
when ~5 to 7 kV is applied to a .005 diameter SS wire, discharge into the
air ONLY occurs at the end of the wire, NEVER from any other point along
the length of the wire (unless a grounded point is placed very near it).
Only by reducing the wire diameter to .004 and changing the material to one
with a lower work function does a corona discharge occur throughout the
length of the wire at that voltage.

This is the only reason a quad antenna is often quieter than a Yagi in bad weather. There is no protruding end.

People think it is because it is a closed loop, but the real reason is it doesn't have a protruding open end.

Your work with electrostatics gives you good insight. The effect of insulated wires having a charge on the insulation that attracts dust even occurs in amplifiers. This is why storms charge insulated antennas almost as easily as bare wire. Charge migrates right through the insulation.

73 Tom
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