[TowerTalk] Beverage performance VS term resistor

Jeff Blaine KeepWalking188 at ac0c.com
Fri Jan 24 01:36:26 EST 2020


This is interesting Steve.  A pair of termination resistor values are 
handy depending on the activity and your comment below suggests that 
application.  I live in the middle of the US and while a highly 
directional 160m antenna is great for working NE & general EU DX (my bev 
points NE) - it's bad for contests like the ARRL & CQ 160 where many 
callers are somewhere off the back - and you do want to hear them.

My solution is exactly as you have below - a normal 450-ish value term 
for "normal" directional activity, and a higher valued one (700 ohms?  I 
forget) for when I want a lower noise kind of more omni antenna.

Under this scenario, I have a circle HiZ 8 for getting directional when 
needed, but the generic antenna when running is the higher value 
terminated beverage which lets me hear off the back without having to 
spin the HiZ around and getting fills on weaker callers.

73/jeff/ac0c
alpha-charlie-zero-charlie
www.ac0c.com


On 1/23/20 3:05 PM, VE6WZ_Steve wrote:
> The recent experiments with my Beverages in the cold weather has raised some comments about the termination resistor and the antenna performance.  I received a few emails asking about F/B. I made the comment that it really is'nt worth the effort trying to get the termination value exact. Close is good enough.
>
> Changing the termination resistor value has only a limited effect on the RDF of the antenna.  The F/B can change some what, but the zenith and side rejection is mostly preserved independent of the termination value.
> This is well described by John in the the Lowband DXing book. (5th edition, pg 7-64 “conclusions”)
>
> Today I did some modelling on a 920’ wire.  RDF with a 500 Ohm term is 11.7 dB, with 200 Ohm term it is 11.3 dB, and with 800 Ohm term it is 11.4 dB.  So only about .4 dB of RDF change with a very significant (+/- 300 Ohm) resistor change.  Looking at the azimuth and Zenith plots, the front-to-side remains mostly unchanged while rear lobes develop that diminish the F/B.  However, unless there is a specific noise, or QRM problem from the back of the Beverages, this will likely go un-noticed.  The important parameter is RDF….the rejection of noise in the full 3D hemisphere compared to the max forward gain.
>
> In fact, I modelled no termination (by inserting 1 e6 Ohms as a term resistor) and the RDF of the bi-directional Beverage is still 9.7 dB. (almost zero F/B) This is pretty decent, and is better than many other small loop antennas and smaller arrays.  The azimuth pattern still shows significant side and zenith rejection which is why the RDF calculates so well.  This is perhaps why many ops have had good success with bi-directional Beverages.
>
> If you are unfamiliar with what the RDF metric, Greg has a good explanation here: http://www.seed-solutions.com/gregordy/Amateur%20Radio/Experimentation/RDFMetric.htm <http://www.seed-solutions.com/gregordy/Amateur%20Radio/Experimentation/RDFMetric.htm>
>
> 73, de steve ve6wz
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