HF Min102606
HF Min102606
HF Min102606
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NSARC HF Operators
The Challenge
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NSARC HF Operators
Operating Issues
- - - ! Performance issues using short antennas
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" Lower gain less wire in the sky " Narrower bandwidths tuning required " Non-50 ohm feed point impedances tuner needed
! Safety issue
" You and the antenna may share the same space " RF biological exposure limits to be checked " Structural integrity of mounted antennas make secure
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NSARC HF Operators
Building RF Transparency
- - - - ! Conducting materials at wavelength spacing ! Wooden frame structures
" RF transparency - good " Internal conductors antennas
! Power, telephone, cable, alarm etc wiring ! Copper plumbing
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! Concrete structures
" RF shielded at HF
! Rebar and metal framed windows small aperture ! Metal 2 x 4 framing inside building ! Internal conductors
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NSARC HF Operators
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! Bottom
" " " " access to ground mounted antennas grounding systems possible feeder runs OK tenant spacing, top & 2 sides
! Mid floors
" interior or balcony mounted antennas " tenants all around
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Antenna Circuit
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Generator the transmitter Feedline two conductors Antenna two wires Antenna as R = radiation resistance at resonance
! Complete the circuit - current must flow entirely around the loop
current
transmitter
feedline
current
antenna
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NSARC HF Operators
Hertzian Antenna
- - - - ! No earth connection required for Antenna good! ! Antenna radiates independent of ground
dipole
Balun
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earthground
! Rig grounded by green wire in power cord - SAFETY ! This ground is not part of the antenna system.
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Marconi Antenna
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Antenna operates against ground. Ground circuit is required real earth or artificial Ground is the other half of the antenna circuit Ground consists of a conductive surface to vertical mirror the top half of the antenna
feedline
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Transmitter
safety ground
earthground
! Rig grounded by green wire in power cord - SAFETY ! Safety ground could become part of antenna system ! Not desirable
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Standard Antenna
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! Resonant Half Wave dipole ! At resonance, feed point ~ 50 ohms (radiation resistance)
" Good match to 50 ohm coax " Low VSWR " Maximum power transfer from rig to antenna
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! Efficiency drops
" ohmic losses become a significant part of the feed point Z
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Solutions
-- --! Dipoles ! Loops ! Verticals ! Long (actually short) wires ! Other?
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Restore Resonance
- ! Short antenna looks capacitive
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! Restore feed point impedance to look resistive ! Add an inductor somewhere in the antenna
" nulls out the capacitance creates resonant circuit " used with both dipoles & verticals
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! Tuner matches complex antenna feed point impedance to 50 ohm output of transmitter ! Useful for multi-band operation ! Tuning limitations may be evident if tuner cannot match the antenna / feed line impedance. ! Rig tuners not well suited to offresonant antennas
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Loading Coils
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Balun
http://www.spiromfg.com/
" 80m dipole from 132 ft to 69 ft " 40m dipole from 66 ft to 38 ft " most likely an outdoor application
Wire Antennas
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http://www.alphadeltacom.com/
! Radio Works
http://radioworks.com/
Compact Dipoles
! Ventenna
" " " "
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! Buddipole
" " " " " 40 to 2m coil loaded collapsible 16 feet extended http://www.buddipole.com/
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Compact Vertical
! Ventenna
" " " "
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Small and very suitable for apartments 36 inch diameter No ground system required MFJ-1786 20 thru 10m MFJ-1788 40 thru 15 m Good performance reviews on eHam Low noise advantage Self tuning no external tuner needed Inside or outside dwelling
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- Home made - construct wire loop Could reside inside dwelling Hang horizontal or vertical Requires external tuner & balun
" LDG Z-100 tuner + RBA balun " http://www.ldgelectronics.com
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Loop
safety ground
earth ground
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Compact Yagi's
-- --! Hybrid Quad
" " " " Model MQ-1 20 thru 6m 11 ft elements / <5 ft boom http://www3.sympatico.ca/
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! ZX Mini-2000 Beam
" 10/15/20m 3 element " 3m boom / 3.4m elements
! Both at http://www.dxzone.com/cgi-bin/dir/jump2.cgi?ID=4044
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Vertical Antennas
- ! Verticals are unbalanced antennas
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! Require a ground plane or counterpoise ! Copper plumbing and Safety ground wiring NOT a good choice for RF ground / counterpoise. ! Mounting possible off balconies, rooftops or at ground level ! Inside a dwelling, maybe not so practical
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Radial System
Multiwire
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! Lay radials out symmetrically as possible ! Bend ends to fit, no bends at base
Radials
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Counterpoise
Single Wire
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! A conductor(s) used as a substitute for earth or ground in an antenna system. ! Usually just one or two wires ! Counterpoise will have RF on it and will radiate ! Undefined operation if using building copper pipe or safety ground wiring as counterpoise. ! MFJ-931 Artificial Ground loads a short counterpoise
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! Coil at base = feed point ! Intended for mobile applications ! Uses car body as counterpoise ! Use as base with a radial or counterpoise system
http://www.mfjenterprises.com/
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Capacity Hats
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! Capacity Hat placed at end (top) of antenna ! Resonates the antenna ! Removes the Capacitive component ! Placement most effective at end of antenna
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Capacity Hats
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Capacity Hat 40 thru 2m No Radials Feed line balun 12 feet high 24 footprint
MFJ-1796
http://www.mfjenterprises.com/
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Current Baluns
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- - - - Coax feedline to vertical use a current choke / balun Keep RF from flowing on coax & entering shack Isolates rig / ant from safety ground Coax coil choke
" CQ magazine Oct 2006 pg 44
! Snap On chokes
" RF Parts or DX Engineering " http://www.dxengineering.com/ " http://www.rfparts.com/choke.html
! Ferrite Beads
" Palomar Engineering model BA-8 " http://www.palomar-engineers.com/
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Good for ground mount or flat roof to 30 ft high Requires ground system Multi-band 80 thru 10m MFJ http://www.mfjenterprises.com/ Hygain http://www.wb0w.com/hygain/hygain.htm Motorized, tuneable Multiband, fully resonant 80 10m Extends to ~ 9 ft, some shorter Requires ground system High Sierra http://www.cq73.com/ Tarheel http://www.tarheelantennas.com/home
! Screwdriver
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! Balcony Verticals
" " " " " " Designed for balcony mount Require ground system ~ 6 ft Multiband 40 10m MFJ 1622 B&W AP-10A http://www.bwantennas.com/
Radials / counterpoises generally required. 12/2/2006 NSARC HF Operators 31
Balcony Mounted
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! Longer verticals
" Painter pole, retractable, telescoping mast " Mobile whips " June 2006 TCA
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! http://www.eham.net/forums/AntennaRestrictions
! Pigeon preventors ! Ideas, reviews, comments .
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" easy to build string outdoors, #22 insulated black " need to support two ends
! Typically non resonant ! Usually end fed high Z point ! Must have a tuner (other than rig) ! Tuner must have a ground or counterpoise connection
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Stealth
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! ARRL Book ! Flagpole Verticals ground mounted ! Wires lying on roof tops
" Black insulation, small dia, #22
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Wires on Fences - Loops Attics for yagis VHF/UHF on short mast looks like TV antennas Vent pipe VHF/UHF verticals, roof mounted
" Ventnna
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Subsurface Dipole
Really ??
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! Rather experimental
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Safety
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! Exposure to RF fields
" Biological heating " Safety Code 6 Canadian Standard
! http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/epic/internet/insmt-gst.nsf/en/sf01635e.html
" Exposure Factor - closeness to antenna " Exposure Factor - transmitter power levels
! Antenna Voltages
" RF burns from ends of antennas " Hot grounds at unknown locations if safety ground or plumbing used as counterpoise
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Exposure Calculation
- - - - - ! Approximates Safety Code 6 uncontrolled environment ! Calculate safe field strength
http://n5xu.ae.utexas.edu/cgi-bin/rfsafety.cgi
Calculate Radio Frequency Power Density
What is the average power at the antenna: In watts What is the antenna gain in dBi: Enter 2.2 for dipoles; add 2.2 for antennas rated in dBd What is the distance to the area of interest: From the center of the antenna, in feet What is the frequency of operation: In MHz
Do you wish to include effects of ground reflections?
Calculate RF P ower Density
20 0
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Calculation Results
Average Power at the Antenna Antenna Gain in dBi Distance to the Area of Interest Frequency of Operation
20.000 watts 0.00 dBi 5.00 feet 20.000 MHz No 0.0686 mw/cm2
20
Yes
No
2.25 mw/cm2 0.46 mw/cm2 0.92 feet yes 2.00 feet yes
Reset Values
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Summary
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Verticals work will work but require radials or counterpoise Long wires will work but require counterpoise Try and get the antenna outside somewhere Do not create a special station RF ground the radial or counterpoise is your RF ground Keep antenna away from metallic objects
" Aluminum window frames " Service entrance
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