Top Banner
Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW
34

Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Dec 19, 2015

Download

Documents

Marcus Lawrence
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Antenna Experiments & Explanations

FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW

Page 2: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Hamstick antenna

Page 3: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Hamstick dipole mount.

Page 4: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Antenna in the living room.... 1st try, good SWR at 14.076 MHz

Page 5: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Antenna in the living room.... rotated 90 degrees, not so good now, best SWR only 2.4 at 14.570 MHz

Page 6: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Lower is better – now SWR 2.0 at 14.160. Moral: you would really prefer to have your antenna up in a tree.

Page 7: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

What can we expect – some websites

DX Propagation: Maximum Usable Frequency predictions:

http://www.spacew.com/www/realtime.php

Page 8: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Let's look a bit closer at that...

Page 9: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.
Page 10: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

KC1KRS in ARRL SS SSB Nov 15-16 2014: 14 states on 10 meters

Page 11: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Sometimes you don't want DX, you want to make a more local contact. Critical frequency is what you want to know about...

http://www.spacew.com/www/fof2.html

Page 12: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Let's look at these sites in real time

Page 13: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Propagation forecasts are nice, but you can do more using

Internet tools...

RBN (Reverse Beacon Network) is a network of listening posts around the world that scan entire bands and decode and report digital (including CW) signals heard.

http://www.reversebeacon.net/

(Sorry, it doesn't work for voice modes, yet)

Page 14: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.
Page 15: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

You can look for your own signal – the next slide is the result while testing indoor antennas at my house a few days ago.

After that we'll try it live... with some variations.

Page 16: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.
Page 17: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

There is also a network of Software Defined Radios - the WebSDR. Here you can see a graphic display in real time of all the signals in a range of frequencies and you can select

any one signal and hear how it sounds at the distant site.

At http://www.websdr.org/ you can see all the sites available to choose from.

My favorite is a site in New Jersey, I sometimes monitor ourSnail Net by looking at this site:

http://96.225.100.244:8902/

(Note he is using a dynamic DNS service – his address may change from time to time

Page 18: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.
Page 19: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Before going on to part 2, try these things live on web:

(see whether 20 meters still open, maybe go to 40)

On RBN,

Look for my own signal as dx

Look for W1AW/1 or W1AW/5 as dx

Look at K1TTT as de

On WebSDR – see if we can be seen in NJ or somewhere else not too far

If not us look for something else – W1AW/* good bet

Page 20: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Part 2: Explanations... The magic of ¼ wavelength wires

Page 21: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

The J-pole – why so popular?J-pole antenna: a half-wave dipole and a tapped

quarter wave stub.

Page 22: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

You can make it out of copper pipe:

Page 23: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

You can make it from twinlead

Page 24: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

How it works: the voltage on a half-wave dipole is maximum at the ends. The current is lowest where voltage is highest and vice-versa. A quarter wave matching section transforms the high impedance at the bottom of the half wave to very low at the shorted end. By connecting the feed line at a tap on the matching section about 1/10th of the way from the low impedance end a match to the relatively low feedline impedance is made.

Page 25: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Al's twinlead J-Pole

Page 26: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

The Magic of the Quarter WaveA simple quarter wave vertical needs a ground connection. A quarter

wavelength radial is a virtual ground – the high impedance at the open

end makes the other end exactly equivalent to a connection to ground.

The ground plane antenna would work OK with just one radial, but

having more than one makes the directional pattern symmetrical.

Page 27: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.
Page 28: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

How Long is a ¼ wavelength?

Quarter wave (ft) = 234 / freq (MHz)3.5 MHz 67'7.0 MHz 33'10 MHz 23'14 MHz 16'18 MHz 13'21 MHz 11'25 MHz 9'28 MHz 8'50 MHz ~5'

146 MHz ~19” 440 MHz ~6.4”

Page 29: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

Multi-band radials – this is how Butternut suggests you can make a multi-band radial for the HF6V multiband vertical

antenna.

Page 30: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

A partial explanation of how it works....

Page 31: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

N1AW HF6V

Page 32: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

N1AW HF6V

Elevated

radials

Page 33: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

N1AW HF6V

Elevate radials

and feedpoint

Page 34: Antenna Experiments & Explanations FCARC November 17, 2014 Al Woodhull N1AW.

The End

This Powerpoint file will be online at:

http://www.fcarc.org/Files/AntennaTalk141116.ppt