W4RNL Antennas Made of Wires Vol 3
W4RNL Antennas Made of Wires Vol 3
W4RNL Antennas Made of Wires Vol 3
Made of Wires
Volume 3
ISBN: 1-877992-87-9
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 4
L. B. has published over two dozen books, with works on antennas for both the
beginner and the advanced student. Among his books are a basic and
intermediate tutorial in the use of NEC antenna modeling software and
compilations of his many shorter pieces. Some 30 of these books have been
published by antenneX and listed in the BookShelf at our website.
He was a ham since 1954 and also a life member of QCWA and of 10-10
International. He also maintained a web site ( http://www.cebik.com ) on which he
has placed a large collection of entries from his notebooks and publications
sponsored by antenneX. A PhD and a teacher for over 30 years, he retired as
professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
antenneX is/was very fortunate, indeed, to have had LB as a member of its
writing team and Tech Editor for some 12 years.
I for one, lament daily at the tragic loss of one of my closest friends. I think of him
often to this day. — November 2010
— Jack L. Stone, Publisher
PREFACE
“it’s not just wires anymore, it’s an antenna!”
W
hile numerous articles and books have described various wire antenna
designs, but here is a series of new books from the works of antenna
master, L.B. Cebik, W4RNL (SK). He is known the world over for his
unique ideas about new ways to "bend wires" to get the most out of them. With
LB’s guidance, your success is practically guaranteed. It would be a rare
occasion indeed that any design recommended by this author will not work as
described. One can proceed with that confidence in mind.
This book is dedicated to the design, construction and use of antennas of various
types of wire. The reader can save a lot of time and effort by reading these
books. Then, experiment to your heart's content with an aim toward the goal of
achieving the best signal for your unique environment.
With wire, antennas are very simple and easy to build at a very lowest of cost to
achieve one’s goal. This book will demonstrate a number of designs from
conventional antenna wisdom. How satisfying is it to twist and bend wires
together and make connections only to suddenly discover, it’s not just wires
anymore, it’s an antenna!
One book is not enough to describe all of the best-known and LB’s unique
designs, but we continue with this third Volume picking up where Volume 1 and 2
left off and progress toward the more complex designs.
Along with some recommended wires, a pair of gloves and simple hand tools,
wonders will sprout from your efforts quickly. And, with wires, such designs can
be made to fit within the closest of environments. Many tips are suggested about
how to make cramped spaces an asset rather than a liability—and keep your
neighbors friendly as well.
We know the reader, newbie or advanced, will enjoy this book, Volume 3 of a 3-
book series, by one of the masters and have fun in the process!
Preface
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 6
Table of Contents
Chapter 51
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 8
cage. Fig. 1 outlines some of the basic shapes and some of the critical
dimensions. We shall consider ribbons with 2 and 4 wires. As well, we
shall look at cages consisting of 4 and 6 wires. Our first task will be to
see what dimensions for each shape coincide with which single-wire
diameters. We may do this within the boundaries of NEC modeling if we
observe a few precautions.
The ends of ribbons and cages often come to a point at both the
center feedpoint gap and at the outer ends to which we normally attach
support ropes. Both angular geometries tend to yield AGT values that are
not ideal (1.000 in free space), and these variations can distort
comparisons. We can avoid the variable AGT values by two simple
modeling techniques. At the outer ends of cages and ribbons, we can
use a simple set of perimeter wires to join longitudinal ends. At the
feedpoint, we may run the wires in straight parallel lines. To create a
common feedpoint, we next select one wire as the source wire. We then
connect from this wire to each other wire in the group a near-zero length
of lossless transmission line. The characteristic impedance is not critical,
since the length is almost zero (1e10-5 or shorter) and virtually no
impedance transformation can occur. These models tend to yield more
accurate results relative to physical ribbon and cage antennas than do
models that try to replicate the details of the many angular junctions. For
example, the current values along wire that are directly fed and fed via
the lengthless lines are identical. As well, the scheme yields rather
precise feedpoint impedance values that coincide with physical antennas.
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Chapter 51
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 10
(4”) apart. The 4-wire cage is 0.707’ per side for a diagonal dimension of
1’. The 6-wire cage has wires 0.5’ apart for a diagonal of 1’.
Table 1 provides the results of the initial runs for a resonant frequency
of 3.6 MHz. From the data, we may draw a few initial conclusions.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 11
2. The added two wires in the 4-wire ribbon element are inside the
outer wires that are 1’ apart. The current levels on the inner wires are
about 0.75 the values on the outer wires: lower but still very significant, as
indicated by the shorter resonant length of the 4-wire ribbon relative to the
2-wire ribbon.
Chapter 51
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 12
that would place the dipole structure outside the range of practicality.
Nevertheless, we shall explore almost all of the initial options. The one
exception is the 2-wire ribbon. This structure did not achieve the desired
goal even with a spacing of 9’, so I eliminated it from the list of samples.
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The SWR curves in Fig. 2 are based upon the impedance values
at the actual antenna feedpoint. Before we close these notes, we shall
have occasion to add a feedline to the system. However, it will not be the
sort of single-cable installation that we usually think of in connection with
dipole antennas.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 15
The cage and ribbon elements share some common features. All
have very significant cross section dimensions. As well, all show a typical
single-element dipole SWR curve with a single minimum at a frequency
just below the arithmetic mid-band point. If we can give up the shape of
the SWR curve, we may achieve full-band 80-75-meter coverage with
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 16
other antenna designs, some of which are more compact with respect to
the cross section dimensions.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 18
value with slowly rising values above and below the resonant frequency.
Instead, as shown in Fig. 5, the SWR show multiple minimums. The
values are well below 2:1 across the band, but often higher than 1.5:1, a
value at which some high-power amplifiers for amateur service set their
fold-back circuit cut-off points. However, like the ribbon and the cage
dipoles, the SWR curve for the 3-wire parasitic system does not include
the losses of reasonable lengths of coaxial cables in the 70-75-Ω range.
The design shown, although generated just for these notes, is not
unlike coupled resonator antennas that have appeared in amateur
journals, such as QST. Construction may be simpler than for any of the
other antennas examined so far, and it does not require any further
matching relative to current equipment input/output impedance standards.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 19
wire, and the outline and dimensions appear in Fig. 6. The wire
arrangement is one possibility within a continuum of dimensions that yield
a multi-minimum SWR pattern.
The width of the folded structure is less than 5’. This width is in a
frontier zone between the folded structure acting like a folded dipole and
the structure acting like simply a highly elongated loop. The loop alone is
resonant at about 3.52 MHz, with the linear element having a self-
resonant point at about 4.05 MHz if it were not subject to very high
interaction with the loop. In turn, the parasitic linear element raises the
self-resonant point of the loop to produce the 300-Ω SWR curve in Fig. 7.
The curve for 450 Ω shows that the antenna would be equally at home
with a higher-impedance parallel line, such as common window line. The
latter has about half the loss per unit length as even transmitting versions
of 300-Ω ribbon or tubular line.
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Fig. 9 shows the 72-Ω SWR curve for the dipole without the
matching system in place and the 50-Ω curve at the junction of the
matching section and the main feedline. The system easily covers the
entire band, although the SWR values exceed 1.5:1 near the ends of the
band. Theoretically, we can use any multiple of ½-λ for the 50-Ω section
of the line. Longer lines will show the double-dip SWR curve that is not
fully visible with a single half-wavelength section. However, for real lines
with losses, the band-edge SWR performance will deteriorate.
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We can view the Witt system as a version of the “match line and
stub” matching system, after suitable adjustment of the feedpoint
impedance values with the top open stub. The calculated values required
for each of the three lines provides for broad-band service by opposing
the natural trends in impedance transformation at key points in the
system. The result is the double-dip 50-Ω SWR curve shown in Fig. 11.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 26
Efficiency
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circuits might find a shortcoming: the 72-Ω SWR exceeds 1.5:1 at the
band edges, although the 50-Ω curves is quite well tamed. A similar
concern might strike the user of a 3-wire coupled resonator system with
an equal length of 75-Ω cable, as shown in Fig. 13.
The final question is whether we can further tame the SWR curves
without adversely harming dipole efficiency.
Combining Techniques
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Chapter 51
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Conclusion
The best results occurred with broadband dipoles and either 75-Ω
cable or one of the transmission-line-based matching systems. Although
the samples used the W6NL system, the AI1H system would have
returned equivalent results. Each case showed that if we opt for a coaxial
cable feedline, a certain reduction in gain is a cost of the option, however
we arrange the cable. However, the broader the bandwidths of the initial
dipoles, the lower were the losses at the band edges. Moreover, by
combining physical methods of creating broadband dipoles with
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Chapter 51
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The 50-Ω SWR curves show distinct higher and lower frequency
resonance points. To move each resonant frequency, one may adjust the
length of either the longer wire or the shorter wire. Although the
frequencies of the resonant points are relatively independent, their
positions determine both the band-edge and the mid-band SWR values.
Note from the SWR curves that, like all broadband 80/75-meter antennas,
the SWR curves will be somewhat height-sensitive, since on average,
antennas for the band are less than ½-λ above ground. Therefore,
anyone who wishes to replicate the antenna—and it is worthy of
Chapter 51
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 36
One key to the operation of the UR0GT wide-band antenna is the fact
that on each side of center, the two wires are 90° apart in current phase
angle at 3.75 MHz. The relative current magnitudes on the short and the
long sections vary with frequency within the overall passband, yielding a
low 50-Ω SWR across the entire band. Note in Fig. 19 the dominance of
either the long wire or the short wire at the lower and upper band edges.
(The last line in the data in the figure shows the ratio of higher to lower
Chapter 51
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 37
current and also the phase-angle difference [Δ] between the wires at each
sampled frequency.)
Chapter 51
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 38
I
n Chapter 51: “Coverage of the 80/75-Meter Band with AWG #12
Copper Wire”, I explored some of the methods for obtaining full
coverage across the 3.5 to 4.0 MHz span with a single antenna. I re-
examined some further options in a QEX column that opened some
additional possibilities offered by combining broadbanding techniques.
Some of the methods of matching via combinations of transmission line
proved robust enough to allow the use of ribbon or cage constructs with
relative small proportions, instead of the very large dimensions required
for direct full coverage by the antenna alone. In fact, we were able to
obtain 50-Ω SWR curves with values less the 1.5:1, thus meeting the
most rigorous requirements of amateur amplifiers having the most
sensitive fold-back circuits.
Near the end of the QEX piece, I cautioned that the dimensions
shown in the samples applied only to antennas in the 70’ to 100’ height
range over average ground. Outside that range, the antenna builder will
have to make a considerable number of experimental adjustments to
assure performance, and at some heights, the arrangement may not work
at all. Because most amateurs under-appreciate the effects of height on
the resonant frequency and feedpoint impedance of dipoles less than 1 λ
above ground, we might well re-visit the question. Along the way, we
shall discover why certain matching schemes have application only at
certain heights for 80-75-meter antennas. As well, we can investigate
how we might tailor the dipole length and the lengths of cables forming
the matching system to optimize performance at heights within the usable
range.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 39
Some Fundamentals
The restrictions and the goals for our project remain unchanged
relative to earlier investigations. The antenna material is AWG #12
copper wire. I use the following transmission lines to model the matching
system with the dipole at 90’ above average ground: 50 Ω: RG-213, VF
0.66, loss 0.6 dB/100' @ 10 MHz; 75 Ω: RG-216, VF 0.66, loss 0.7
dB/100' @ 10 MHz. These lines easily handle amateur power limits on 80
and 75 meters. The goal is to achieve with reasonable efficiency a 50-Ω
SWR curve from 3.5 to 4.0 MHz with no SWR value exceeding 1.5:1.
Chapter 52
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Chapter 52
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72-Ω SWR at
Antenna Length 3.5 MHz 4.0 MHz
There are two general matching methods in use, and both appear
in Fig. 2. The two-line system uses a ½-λ section of 50-Ω cable followed
by a ¼-λ section of 75-Ω cable. At 90’, the dipole impedance is close to
90 Ω at resonance. If we cut the ½-λ section of 50-Ω cable for the
geometric mean frequency of the passband (about 3.742 MHz), the
feedpoint impedance will repeat itself at that frequency. On either side of
this frequency, the cable length will no longer be precisely ½-λ. Hence,
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SWR values of less than 1.5:1 across the band. In pursuit of that goal,
we shall have to adopt a dipole with an initial SWR bandwidth that is
wider than the value we may obtain from a single #12 wire. Moreover, we
may wish to vary the antenna height and the soil quality. Each of these
variations from the original problem confronts us with limitations of the
matching systems.
Both matching systems rely on the fact that at about 90’ the dipole
impedance at resonance is approximately 90 Ω. An impedance value in
this vicinity provides the correct conditions for the main 50-Ω line in either
system to transform off-resonance impedance values within the passband
to values that, when further transformed by the ¼-λ series section or
compensated for by the open and shorted stubs, provide near-50-Ω
impedance values across the band. At other heights, the dipole resonant
impedance may not be optimal.
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geometric mean frequency of about 3.742 MHz. We may alter any one or
more of the three variables to seek a better curve. We may define a
better curve as one in which all peak SWR values are the lowest possible
with relatively equal values for all three peaks (band-edge and mid-band).
We shall eventually modify this definition slightly.
The changes in line lengths for a 90’ dipole height are largely
cosmetic, compared to using the standard calculations. However, at both
70’ and 110’, the changes in all three variables yield superior SWR curves
compared to making no changes at all. The required dipole length
increases with height. However, for both new heights, the ½-λ 50-Ω line
is slightly shorter than for 90’. In contrast, in both cases, the ¼-λ 75-Ω
transformer section is longer. The precise changes are functions of the
Chapter 52
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 50
fact that as we change the antenna height, the resistive and reactive
components of the impedance do not change in step with each other.
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Chapter 52
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 52
provides the best SWR pattern across the passband. We must note that
soil improvement also yields SWR improvement—however small it might
be—while soil degradation provides a less optimal plot. As we reduce the
antenna height, with a resulting change in the dipole length to keep the
curve centered, we find slightly lesser values over average ground than
we found at 90’, but the three curves for different soil types are more
tightly grouped with far less difference related to soil quality. In contrast,
the family of patterns at 110’ results in patterns with a higher set of mid-
band peak values. In fact, the SWR curve for very poor soil yields a mid-
band peak value just slightly above our 1.5:1 limit. The variations that we
see inform us of a basic system limitation.
If we use the same 4-wire cage construction for our dipole and
then employ the AI1H matching system, as outlined on the right in Fig. 2,
we add a fourth variable to the adjustment list. We may change the
length of the dipole itself, which will be longer than the dipole for the 2-line
system. In addition, we can change the lengths of the main linking line,
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 53
the open stub at the dipole end, and the shorted stub at the junction with
the main feedline. Before we explore these changes, let’s create a set of
data on the changes created by simple height changes with the standard
set-up relatively optimized for a height of 90’. Table 6 provides the
necessary information.
Table 6. The effects of antenna height above average ground on the
impedance properties of a semi-fat 4-wire cage dipole plus the AI1H
matching system
For reference, Fig. 8 shows the 50-Ω SWR sweep for the initial
system at 90’ above average ground. The curve is similar to the one for
the 2-line system (in Fig. 4) in having not only band-edge peak values,
but also a distinct mid-band peak SWR value. Essentially, when we place
an antenna analyzer at the junction of the main feedline and the matching
system, we shall find two near-resonant frequencies, as reflected in the
tabular data. We may note in passing that the two frequencies are
closest together at the height at which we obtain the most optimal results.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 54
As we move away from that height, either upward or downward, the two
frequencies grow father apart.
Adjusting all four of the variables to optimize the curves for various
heights requires patience, and even so, there are other combinations that
can produce virtually the same results. Table 7 shows the results of
optimizing the 50-Ω SWR curves for 70’, 90’, and 110’ above average
ground. Once more, the dipole length increases as we increase the
antenna height over the span of the samples. However, the other length
values do not appear to follow a clearly regular pattern because the
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 55
antenna feedpoint impedance value changes with both the height above
ground and the length of the dipole. Since the resonant points are widely
separated, resonating the dipole at a particular frequency does not
provide ready guidance.
Table 7. Optimized dimension and 50-Ω SWR results for 70’, 90’, and 110’
high 4-wire cages dipoles with a 2-line matching system
Dipole Dipole Open St. Shorted St. Link Line 50-Ω SWR
Height Length Length Length Length 3.5 MHz Mid-band 4.0 MHz
70’ 124.4’ 13.5’ 21.5’ 99.0’ 1.33 1.25 1.35
90’ 127.0’ 13.5’ 21.0’ 99.0’ 1.33 1.25 1.33
110’ 127.8’ 13.1’ 22.0’ 99.5’ 1.28 1.27 1.28
Chapter 52
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 57
The curves share a common trait: as the soil quality increases, the
frequency differential between resonant points decreases. In fact, the
frequency spacing between SWR minimum points follows the same
pattern with the 2-line matching system, but those curves are too shallow
to detect it easily. The poorest soil yields the highest mid-band SWR
peak values, regardless of antenna height (within the sampling range),
but the spread of the SWR minimum points often accompanies these
peaks with lower band-edge SWR values. In the end, construction and
installation site variables would likely obscure the fine shades of
difference in the plots.
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Conclusion
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 59
Gain at
System 3.5 MHz 3.75 MHz 4.0 MHz
4-wire cage fed at feedpoint 6.16 6.29 6.48
With 2-line system 5.41 5.75 5.78
(Gain loss) (0.75) (0.54) (0.70)
With AI1H system 5.18 5.56 5.52
(Gain loss) (0.98) (0.73) (0.96)
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 60
A
mong the oldest directional antennas are the ones labeled
"long-wire" antennas. Dating to the late 1920s and early
1930s, we still find some of these antennas in active use--
not only in amateur circles, but as well in government and military
service. Classic names, such as Beverage and Bruce attach to
early developments of long-wire antennas. In the group, we include
bi-directional antennas such as the long center-fed doublet and
end-fed wire, along with more directional arrays such as the
terminated long-wire, the terminated V-beam, and the rhombic.
Along the way, we, we shall encounter some traditional terms, such
as rhombic "tilt angle" and "traveling-wave" antenna. Many college
texts are gradually replacing the term "traveling-wave" with "non-
resonant" or "terminated." As we shall discover, a terminated
antenna is one that ends with a resistance. Since the resistance will
dominate the feedpoint impedance, the antenna becomes non-
resonant over a fairly wide operating bandwidth. How these two
ideas relate to the term "traveling-wave" we shall learn at the
proper place along our path?
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 62
Everything begins with the wire antenna, plain and simple. So our
journey will start with the center-fed doublet that is familiar in its
shorter forms. We shall also look at longer forms of the doublet, as
well as at long end-fed wires. Virtually everything in long-wire
technology depends on how lobes develop as we increase the
length of a wire. Most important will be the direction in which the
strongest or main lobes point relative both to the broadside
direction (that is, the direction for the lobes of a half-wavelength
dipole) and to the axis of the wire itself.
Before we can fully appreciate the early work that developed the V-
beam and the rhombic, we must begin our trek in more familiar
territory. Since--as noted--everything begins with the doublet that is
the place to take the first step.
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 63
All real wire materials have some loss that varies with frequency,
but not in a linear manner. Not only does the material loss decrease
the maximum gain obtainable, it also has a small affect on the
feedpoint impedance. Moreover, it has a further small shortening
effect--like the end effect itself, but somewhat smaller in scale.
However, material loss shortening of the physical wire acts all along
the antenna and not just at the ends. To eliminate this factor, our
models will use lossless or perfect wire.
Hwl = 1 / (4 sin a)
a = arcsin 1 / ( 4 Hwl)
The effects of ground are not constant for all frequencies. Even for
a horizontal wire 1-wavelength above ground, the ground losses
change, increasing as we raise the frequency. To sample the
degree of change, let's set the wire diameter for all models at the
test frequency of 3.5 MHz. We shall use 0.16" diameter wire,
approximately AWG #6. If we perfectly scale our antenna for other
frequencies, then the wire size changes as well. At 7 MHz, it is
0.08" (AWG #12). At 14 MHz, it is 0.04" (AWG #18). At 28 MHz, the
size drops to 0.02" (AWG #24). Next, let's use a 1-wavelength wire
at 1 wavelength height and scale it over the set of frequencies to
sample the maximum gain values.
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Although the differentials between very good (VG) soil and very
poor (VP) soil are similar, it is clear that ground effects on antenna
losses are not completely linear. Nevertheless, the effects do not
change enough to invalidate the general trends in center-fed
doublet patterns if we select any other HF frequency to replace the
3.5-MHz test frequency for our investigation.
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One way to eliminate the effects of all loss sources is to model all
antennas in free space using perfect or lossless wire. These
conditions allow us to scale an antenna with no change in
performance values. Scaling, of course, means proportionately
adjusting for frequency or wavelength the length of elements, the
spacing between elements in a multi-element array, and the
diameter of the elements. However, to make the comparisons
among long-wire antennas reasonably realistic, we shall employ a
given height (1 wavelength) and a specific ground quality (called
"average") and omit only the smallest loss sources, such as wire
material and frequency.
The chart shows the growing gain of the main lobes of the center-
fed doublet, once the number of lobes reaches 4 (at the 2-
wavelength mark). The increased strength of the main lobe is
accompanied by a decreasing beamwidth. As well, the angle
moves steadily toward the ends of the wire, but never reaches that
point. In fact, at 11 wavelengths, the main lobes are still 20 degrees
shy of a true end-orientation. Also note that the elevation angle of
the strongest lobe drops slightly as the antenna length passes the
7-wavelength point. The angle would show a smoother curve if the
increment between sampling points had been smaller than 1
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Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 69
degree. However, the drop is real and may be more dramatic with
other types of long-wire antennas.
What the chart cannot show is the growth in the number of lobes
and their relative strengths as we increase the length of the
antenna. Fig. 1 provides a gallery of sample elevation and azimuth
plots to illustrate the growth of lobes in both directions. You may
gauge the shrinking beamwidth from the red line marking the half-
power points on the main lobes. The elevation patterns are taken
along a line using the azimuth angle in the table. The azimuth
patterns are taken at the listed elevation angles.
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Ndblt = 2 Lwl
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3.5 11.68 13 65
4 11.99 13 67
4.5 12.26 13 69
5 12.48 13 70
5.5 12.71 12 71
6 12.90 12 72
6.5 13.08 12 73
7 13.24 12 74
7.5 13.38 12 75
8 13.50 12 76
8.5 13.64 11 76
9 13.72 11 77
9.5 13.87 11 77
10 13.96 11 77
10.5 14.07 11 78
11 14.15 11 78
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Nef = 4 Lwl
where Nef is the total number of identifiable end-fed wire lobes and
L is the end-fed wire length in wavelengths. So the 10-wavelength
end-fed wire has a total of 40 lobes. To squeeze that many lobes
into the same 360-degree pattern requires that each lobe have a
smaller beamwidth (that is, be narrower). As well, the main lobes
have an angle farther from broadside and closer to the wire end
than for a doublet of the same length. In fact, the two main lobes at
each end of the antenna wire begin to fuse into a single large lobe
with a deep inset. Compare these lobes with the very separate
lobes of the doublet.
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The azimuth angle has been a very convenient measure for our
initial examination of both center-fed and end-fed long wire
antennas. It has shown us by how much the main or strongest
lobes of the antenna pattern move from the broadside or zero-
degree position as we make the wire longer, as counted in
wavelengths. In other applications, for example, the discussion of V
and rhombic arrays to come in future parts of this series we shall
view the same angle from a different perspective. We shall be
interested in the amount by which the main lobe is displaced from
the axis of the wire, defined as a line drawn along and beyond the
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The center-fed doublet graph shows that the currents have the
same phase in each half of the overall antenna length. Hence, the
radiation pattern has only two lobes with contributions from each
half of the total wire length. Not until the antenna reaches a
significantly greater length (2 wavelengths is the next step in our
pattern development sequence) will each half of the doublet show a
current phase reversal. Therefore, we do not find 4 lobes until we
reach the 2-wavelength mark. (Of course, a 1.5-wavelength
antenna will show 6 lobes as the initial 2 diminish and the next 4
emerge and grow.) With the end-fed wire, the currents in each half
of the initial 1-wavelength wire are 180-degrees out of phase
relative to each other. Hence, we see 4 lobes at this shorter length.
Unlike the center-fed doublet, the end-fed wire shows only a single
progression of the number of lobes in the azimuth pattern.
Therefore, the single equation for calculating the number of lobes
applies not only to wire lengths that are at or near integral
wavelengths; as well, it applies to wire lengths at are at or near N.5
wavelengths.
Indeed, the way in which lobes appear and grow differs markedly
between center-fed and end-fed antennas that are the same length.
Fig. 8 provides a glimpse of the process by tracking the lobe
structure of the two types of antennas from 2 wavelengths to 3
wavelengths, in 0.25-wavelength increments. I chose this set of
lengths so that the lobes are clear and countable--even when they
are very small. However, similar graphs are possible between any 2
length markers.
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The ground quality not only changes the maximum gain attainable
from the antenna, but as well changes the elevation angle of
maximum radiation. The better the soil the higher the TO angle. But
even over very good soil, the elevation angle of maximum radiation
is significantly lower than the calculated value of 14.5 degrees.
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Conclusion
The end-fed wire, in particular, holds great importance for our future
exploration. It is the foundation of all other long-wire arrays. That
collection, of course, includes both complex rhombics and the
simplest of the directional terminated antennas. Hopefully, from the
perspective of developing reasonable expectations from end-fed
wires, the foundation in these notes is sufficiently solid to make
succeeding steps smoother on the trail of terminated long-wire
antennas.
Balanis, C. A., Antenna Theory: Design and Analysis, 2nd Ed., pp.
488-505: a college text.
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Straw, D. (Ed.), The ARRL Antenna Book, 20th Ed., Chapter 13,
"Long-Wire and Traveling-Wave Antennas." See also older
versions of the volume, for example, Chapter 5 of the 1949 edition,
which gives long-wire technology a more thorough treatment on its
own ground, rather than in comparison to modern Yagi technology.
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I
n Chapter 53 of this Long-Wire series, we examined some
fundamental properties of both center-fed and end-fed
unterminated long-wire antennas. Without the kind of data that
our basic investigation showed, the terminated version of the end-
fed long-wire antenna might seem more odd than natural. As we
move from the symmetry of an unterminated antenna, sometimes
called a "standing-wave" antenna, to the asymmetry of the patterns
of a terminated wire that is the same length, the assimilation of the
nature and growth of both elevation and azimuth lobes will
hopefully carry over to naturalize the new patterns and performance
values. The mark of success in the process might be that we are
able to predict in very general terms "what happens next."
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The results are modest, but coincide roughly with the NEC-2 results
in Option A. The front-to-back reports are consistent with those for
perfect ground. The difficulties with the model include the model
size, since the return wire requires as many segments as its above-
ground counterpart, and the return wire may actually yield slightly
low gain reports by carrying more current than the ground itself. A
real installation would not likely use a buried ground wire.
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Except for the predicted very slight increase in maximum gain, all of
the values correspond very well with those of the buried-return-wire
model (C), but with a 45% reduction in model size. For users of
NEC-4, it is likely that this style of model is about as adequate as
we may get for a terminated long-wire directional antenna. In fact,
for users of NEC-2, the basic model (option A) coincides well
enough for general guidance. In physical reality, there will be
structural variables that will inevitably limit the precision attainable
by any model. For example, the models presume a flat wire
horizontal to the ground, which is not likely to appear with copper
wire and real supports. Even if all supports provide the same
height, catenary effects will vary the actual wire height above
ground along the antenna pathway.
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Test Performance Values for Modeling Option D over Various Soil Qualities
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Test Performance Values for Modeling Option D with Lossless and Copper Wire
Despite the very long length of the wire, copper losses at the test
frequency only lower the gain by about 0.2 dB. All other
performance values remain quite constant.
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When looking over the tabulated results for various ground qualities
during the modeling testing procedure, we met with split lobes over
very poor soil. In order to see better the progression of the forward-
most lobes of the terminated antenna, we can examine Fig. 4. It
provides the azimuth patterns over the 3 soil qualities and over
perfect ground.
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The pattern over perfect ground has a single forward lobe, but all of
the patterns over real ground show two peaks. As the soil quality
decreases, the peaks grow farther apart, with an ever deeper
depression in gain between them. Over very poor soil, the
depression becomes an identifiable null, exceeding 3-dB relative to
the maximum lobe strengths. Hence, the pattern identifies the
peaks as separate lobes. The patterns strongly suggest that
anyone who proposes to construct a terminated long-wire
directional antenna should account in advance for the ground
quality beneath and in the vicinity of the antenna. Depending upon
the specifications of a given communications operation, the 3-dB
null at the center of the 2 peaks over very poor soil might make a
difference to antenna planning.
the vertical legs. As in the test data, if the main lobe is split into 2
lobes with a distinct null (>3 dB) between them, the beamwidth is
an estimate with the letter "S" added to denote the split. TR Loss
provides NEC's calculation of the percentage of applied power
dissipated in the terminating resistor.
End-Fed Terminated Long-Wire Directional Antenna Data
Total Length Maximum Front-Back Elevation Beamwidth Feedpoint Z 600-Ohm TR Loss
WL Gain dBi Ratio dB * Angle deg degrees R+/-jX Ohms SWR %
3 7.11 15.32 14 69-S 537 + j92 1.22 26
4 7.99 16.48 13 59-S 539 + j90 1.21 25
5 8.65 17.91 13 51-S 541 + j89 1.21 24
6 9.15 18.30 12 46-S 543 + j89 1.20 24
7 9.57 19.30 12 43.8 543 + j88 1.20 24
8 9.92 19.51 12 40.2 544 + j88 1.20 23
9 10.20 20.12 12 37.0 544 + j88 1.20 23
10 10.47 20.30 11 35.6 544 + j87 1.20 23
11 10.70 20.58 11 33.4 544 + j87 1.20 23
The most constant data are the values for feedpoint impedance,
600-Ohm SWR, and power dissipated in the terminating resistor.
The front-to-back ratio increases with antenna length. However, this
value has a flag, since the value is related to the heading of peak
gain, which is not the center of the pattern, that is, is not aligned
directly with the wire itself. The maximum gain, the beamwidth and
the elevation angle of maximum gain decrease with increasing total
length.
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The following table compares the maximum gain for terminated and
unterminated end-fed long-wire antennas for lengths from 3 to 11
wavelengths. Note that the unterminated version is essentially bi-
directional, although gain is slightly greater away from the
feedpoint. As the antennas grow longer, the gain deficit for the
directional long-wire antenna grows smaller. However, it is unlikely
to become as low as 3 dB until the terminated long-wire antenna
reaches wholly impractical lengths.
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One final property set needs illustration before we close the book
on terminated long-wire directional antennas. We have noted the
complexity of the lobe structure in both azimuth and elevation
patterns. These 2-dimensional slices of the overall radiation pattern
of the long-wire antenna do not do full justice to the overall radiation
pattern of the antenna. To rectify this gap, at least partially, Fig. 7
provides a 3-dimensional pattern for the 10-wavelength terminated
antenna. The pattern is limited to 5-degree increments, lest finer
detail turn the entire graphic into a simple opaque black-ink ball.
The junction of the X, Y, and Z axes represents the antenna
position relative to the pattern. Since the graphic shows a far-field
pattern, the antenna itself is infinitesimally small. However, the wire
extends along the Y-axis, with the terminating resistor on the +Y
end (toward the field's projection of higher gain).
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One of the forward main lobes from the feedpoint-end section tends
to align itself with one of the main forward lobes of the termination-
end section, and the two lobes are aligned with the wire termination
points. Fig. 8 provides data for the 8-wavelength (or dual-4-
wavelength) bent terminated longwire antenna. The required angle
relative to the pattern centerline is 24 degrees for maximum gain.
This value is a function of the antenna's 1-wavelength height, the
average soil quality, and the wire length. Since the total horizontal
wire length is 8 wavelengths, the angle creates a maximum
antenna width of 1.63 wavelengths, but shortens the overall length
to 7.31 wavelengths.
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Conclusion
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V-Array Basics
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We are fortunate, since we can refer to Part 1 and find the heading
of the main azimuth lobes for each test length of long wire antenna.
The following table lists those headings as well as the resultant
value of angle A. The table also shows several other values. The
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Note: The models in this part of our work make use of angle A as
derived from our modeling of single long-wire antennas. They do
not necessarily optimize that angle for maximum gain. There is a
slight difference.
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The V array is not an antenna for broad coverage of the horizon. Its
wire foundation makes it immovable, and the gain comes at the
expense of beamwidth. Hence, its best use is as a point-to-point
antenna, where the reliability of a single communications link is
more important than communications with many diverse places on
the horizon. The gallery of sample elevation and azimuth patterns
in Fig. 3 will reinforce this judgment.
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there are still many lobes--as there will be for virtually any long-wire
antenna--their strength relative to the main lobes is considerably
weaker than is the case for a single wire.
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V-Beam Basics
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Model B uses the same layout as Model A, but raises the feedpoint
to the same height as the remainder of the antenna. Like Model A,
B uses a pair of terminating resistors. The gain and elevation angle
of maximum gain return to normal values, as shown in the following
test table.
Test Performance Values for Modeling Option B
The gain level of this model changes very slowly with changes in
the values of the terminating resistors. Hence, the table proceeds in
200-Ohm increments. Selecting the most optimal combination
requires some decision-making based on criteria. In the absence of
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Not only is the gain stable across a 2:1 range of resistor values, but
as well both the front-to-back ratio and the feedpoint impedance are
equally stable. NEC calculates that in its altered position, the 1000-
Ohm terminating resistor dissipates only 2.8% of the applied power,
although this result stems from the proximity of the crossing wire to
ground in the model. The actual dissipation may be much larger for
only small increases in resistor and wire height. Nevertheless,
using a very low crossing wire removes it from having a significant
affect on the radiation pattern. In fact, the data for models B and D
are quite similar, although model D appears to be the more stable.
Further test of the V-beam using various leg lengths will employ this
model and its 1000-Ohm resistor.
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When evaluating both the patterns and the tabular data, remember
that at the low end of the sweep, the antenna is only 0.66-
wavelength above ground, accounting for the higher elevation
angle. Similarly, at the top of the sweep, the antenna is 1.34-
wavelengths above ground. The changing height is an additional
variable relative to the departure from an optimal value for angle A,
and both contribute to the listed performance values.
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Note: Once again, the value of angle A is derived from our long-
wire antennas and is not adjusted to achieve maximum gain.
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The table shows a very normal increase in gain with leg length at
the optimal angle A. Both the elevation angle and the beamwidth
for the V-beam tightly correspond to comparable values for the
unterminated V array, with no decrease in beamwidth as we
experienced with the transition from unterminated long-wire to
terminated long-wire antennas. The 180-degree front-to-back ratio
holds around the 20-dB mark, and the impedance is exceptionally
stable throughout the span of leg lengths. (The stability of the
impedance values is an especially good marker of the adequacy of
using values for angle A derived from the unterminated single long-
wire models.) As a side note, compare the V-beam entry for 4-
wavelength legs to the data for the bent terminated long-wire in
Part 2. The gain values a virtually identical, although the V-beam
improves the front-to-back ratio and reduces many of the sidelobes.
Both antennas require 8 wavelengths of horizontal wire.
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Conclusion
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Every step along our path through traveling-wave antennas has led
us to new heights of gain per unit of wire length (as measured in
wavelengths)--and to narrower beamwidths. The final steps take us
to the pinnacle of long-wire development: the rhombic antenna.
(We should note that there are some "fishbone" designs that may
be able to achieve more gain per acre of ground than the designs
with which we are working. However, these antennas use a quite
different design and require at least 2 to 4 wavelengths of wire per
wavelength of forward antenna dimension. We shall not cover them
here. However, the ARRL Antenna Book chapter and the Laport
volume, both cited in the short list of references, cover the basics of
these designs.)
The rhombic antenna derives its name from its shape: the rhombus.
In geometry, a rhombus is an equilateral parallelogram, that is, a
closed 4-sided figure with all sides the same length, but with all
corner angles normally using other than right angles. Fig. 1, at the
top, shows a basic rhombus, with indications of the key dimensions.
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be aligned with the center line. Hence, we can expect more gain
from a rhombic antenna than from a corresponding V antenna.
We may use the selected height and the associated values of angle
A to design any number of rhombic antennas. In fact, we can use a
simple long-wire as the starting point. NEC allows us, via the GM
command, to rotate the wire by the required number of degrees
dictated by the value of angle A for a given wire length. (Programs
like EZNEC use a different but equally effective method of rotating
wires.) Hence, we can easily create a V and find its coordinates.
From those coordinates, we can complete the rhombic by doubling
the overall length and bringing 2 new wires back together--or
almost together. See the lower part of Fig. 1 for 2 possible versions
of an unterminated rhombic configuration.
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Note: The values of angle A derive from our earlier work with single
long-wire antennas. I have not optimized those values to achieve
maximum gain. There is a slight difference.
Performance of Unterminated Rhombic Antennas 1-Wavelength Above Average Ground
Type Leg Length Angle A Elevation Max. Gain Front-Back Beamwidth
WL degrees Angle deg dBi Ratio dB degrees
Open 2 34 14 16.41 2.41 20.4
Closed 2 34 14 15.84 2.90 20.6
Open 3 26 14 17.81 2.40 17.2
Closed 3 26 14 17.50 2.66 17.2
Open 4 23 13 18.89 2.58 14.1
Closed 4 23 13 18.61 2.83 14.4
Open 5 20 13 19.57 2.57 12.8
Closed 5 20 13 19.35 2.77 12.8
Open 6 18 12 20.12 2.55 11.6
Closed 6 18 13 19.95 2.71 11.8
Open 7 16 12 20.53 2.48 11.2
Closed 7 16 12 20.39 2.60 11.2
Open 8 14 12 20.82 2.32 11.0
Closed 8 14 12 20.69 2.42 11.0
Open 9 13 12 21.17 2.27 10.4
Closed 9 13 12 21.03 2.38 10.4
Open 10 13 11 21.52 2.37 9.4
Closed 10 13 11 21.39 2.47 9.4
Open 11 12 11 21.73 2.29 9.0
Closed 11 12 11 21.61 2.38 9.0
At the top of the table, the gain differential between open and
closed rhombics appears to be significant: nearly 0.6 dB. However,
the differential shrinks continuously as we lengthen the legs. By the
time the legs are 11 wavelengths, the gain differential is only a bit
over 0.1 dB. Elevation angles, front-to-back ratios, and beamwidths
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twice as long as the single-wire and V antennas listed for the same
leg length.
Maximum Gain of Various Types of Unterminated Long-Wire Antennas
Leg Maximum Gain dBi
Length Center-Fed End-Fed V Closed Open
WL Doublet Wire Array Rhombic Rhombic
2 9.36 10.27 13.60 15.84 16.41
3 10.16 11.32 14.65 17.50 17.81
4 10.93 11.99 15.48 18.61 18.89
5 11.47 12.48 15.97 19.35 19.57
6 11.85 12.90 16.25 19.95 20.12
7 12.14 13.24 16.56 20.39 20.53
8 12.43 13.50 16.75 20.69 20.82
9 12.65 13.72 16.99 21.03 21.17
10 12.82 13.96 17.24 21.39 21.52
11 13.01 14.15 17.35 21.61 21.73
Although some of the gain increase that we see with longer and
more complex long-wire antennas comes from sidelobe control,
most of it emerges at the expense of beamwidth. We have noted
this fact in past episodes, but it needs a reminder here. Short V and
rhombic antennas (2-wavelength legs) have beamwidths just over
20 degrees. With 10-wavelength legs, the beamwidth is less than
half that value. Although the high gain of long Vs and rhombics
seems attractive to many, the utility of a fixed position narrow-
beamwidth antenna is for point-to-point communications, not for
general communications across the horizon. For comparison, a
half-wavelength dipole has a beamwidth of about 80 degrees while
the beamwidth of a 1.25-wavelength extended double Zepp is
about 30-35 degrees. In many cases, the key design question for
fixed long-wire antennas is less "With whom do I wish to
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The models for the unterminated rhombics have used only 4 wires,
one for each leg. The model source consists of a split source, that
is, two sources in series. The sources go on the segments adjacent
to the junction of the wires at the feedpoint end of the antenna. As
the right side of Fig. 5 reveals, I used a similar technique to place
the terminating resistor. Non-reactive resistive loads go on the last
segment of each far-end wire, with each resistance equaling half
the total terminating resistance. These techniques of placing
sources and loads preclude the need to create a short wire at each
end of the rhombic structure. To preserve an equality of segment
lengths, the bridge wire would have to be long enough that it would
not preserve the value of angle A. Alternatively, to maintain the
value of angle A, the source/load wire would be significantly shorter
than adjacent leg segments, a condition on the source wire that
NEC does not recommend for the most accurate calculations. Split
sources and split loads preserve both the geometry of the model
and the best conditions for calculation.
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Within the usual range of terminating resistor values, the lower the
terminating resistance value, the higher the array gain--but only
slightly so. Fig. 8 overlays the gain values of the rhombic beam for
both the 600- and the 850-Ohm resistors. Throughout the 2:1
frequency range, the 600-Ohm version provides the higher gain,
but by no more than 0.01 to 0.02 dB.
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The tabular data shows the value of angle A (alpha), the elevation
angle of maximum radiation, the maximum forward gain, the 180-
degree front-to-back ratio, the half-power beamwidth, the modeled
feedpoint impedance, and the 850-Ohm SWR. For reference, the
far-right columns provide the maximum gain values for the
corresponding unterminated open rhombics, along with the gain
differential between the terminated and unterminated versions of
the antenna.
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The gain of the single terminated long-wire would not justify its
narrow-band use, since we can obtain similar gain levels from
antenna ranging from dipoles to extended double Zepps at a great
savings in both wire and supporting structures. The single
terminated long-wire acquires its usefulness from the relative
constant feedpoint impedance, allowing great frequency agility. The
terminated V adds about 4-dB of gain, while maintaining a broad
SWR operating bandwidth. However, any angle used as the basis
for the array has frequency limits for a good pattern: outside those
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Conclusion
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B
ecause the rhombic antenna, especially when terminated,
offers very high gain, it has received more design attention
than any of the other long-wire antennas. The
straightforward basic design data sampled in Part 4 does not
exhaust the significant variations on the basic configuration. One
potential particularly suited to amateur service in the upper HF
range is the possibility of operating a rhombic over a 2:1 frequency
range, thus allowing coverage of 20 through 10 meters. We shall
examine one tried and true design and try to find out the basic
design premise that allows it to be successful.
will offer a small gain advantage over the single-wire rhombic, but
will reduce sidelobes by a very significant amount.
Although these developments are worth our notice here, they will
not exhaust the variations on the rhombic. There is, for example,
the so-called half-rhombic, consisting of one side of a rhombic
played against ground. Unfortunately, lossy soil does not permit the
antenna to play like a true rhombic, due to ground reflections and
losses. Despite its name, the antenna operates more like a
terminated, end-fed, inverted V, and highest performance occurs
with only a slight elevation of the center point above ground. The
antenna appears in Bruce's 1931 article and he calls it simply an
inverted-V. The name "half-rhombic" came later from other builders.
Other variations on the rhombic have emerged in answer to specific
commercial and governmental communication needs. The result
has been highly complex arrangements of wire structures well
beyond the scope of these introductory notes. Nevertheless, the
variations that we have selected should provide a sufficient
foundation to let you examine the classical literature on advanced
rhombic designs with understanding.
Multi-Band Rhombics
One notable feature of the antenna is that its design emerged long
before modeling software became available. Hence, its outline rests
directly on the original rhombic design equations, as filtered into
design nomographs. The design begins with 3-wavelength legs at
14 MHz along with a height of about 70' or 1 wavelength at the
lowest frequency of use. It uses a prescribed tilt angle of 64
degrees and hence an angle A value of 26 degrees. These values
coincide perfectly with the values developed via computer
modeling. For this model, I followed the typical amateur
conventions and used a 600-Ohm termination and an SWR
reference impedance of 600 Ohms. The following table lists the
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The gain values parallel almost exactly the curves in Fig. 8 in Part
4, which is also for a rhombic with 3-wavelength legs and an angle
A of 26 degrees. The three differences between the earlier model
and the present one are the design frequency (3.5 vs. 14 MHz), the
wire (perfect 0.16" vs. copper AWG #12 or 0.0808"), and the
terminating resistor value (850 vs. 600 Ohms). Fig. 2 shows a
gallery of elevation and azimuth patterns at each of the test
frequencies. Note that this gallery differs from the galleries in the
earlier parts of this series because angle A is optimized in
combination with the leg length only at the lowest operating
frequency.
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Multi-Wire Rhombics
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The "pointy" ends of the model do not permit ready feeding for a
multi-wire version of the antenna. Therefore, we must revise the
modeling system to allow the wires to terminate together for a
common feedpoint and for a common load resistor. The right side
of Fig. 3 shows the general technique. We create a flat or blunt end
at each rhombic point. To ensure that the source segment has
adjacent segments of equal length on each side, we make the blunt
end-wires 3 segments long. So that the wires will have segments
as close as possible in length to the segments in the long side
wires, the blunt end wires are 0.14-wavelength, based on the use of
20 segments per wavelength in the side wires. Now let's set the
total length of the rhombic to 7.36 wavelengths, with a 3.68-
wavelength distance from either end to the midline. The distance
from the centerline to the peaks will be 1.56 wavelength. The angle
(A) from the centerline to a peak will be 22.97 degrees. However,
the overall wire length will not be exactly 4.0 wavelengths. Instead,
the sloping portion of the side wire will be 3.97 wavelengths, added
to half of the blunt end-wire (0.07 wavelength) for a total length of
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We should note 2 special items in this table. First, the starred item
represents the version of the antenna selected for inclusion in the
larger table in Part 4. There are 2 reasons for selecting this
terminating resistor value. It does result in the highest front-to-back
ratio, although this reason is secondary to another. Without
becoming too finicky, the load resistor and the resistive component
of the feedpoint impedance are most closely matched. With smaller
values of terminating resistance, the resistive component of the
feedpoint impedance is always higher than the load resistance. For
all terminating resistors larger than the selected value, the
feedpoint resistance is always lower than the terminating
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and above the optimal load; the feedpoint resistance is less than
the load resistance.
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a bridge wire for each loop. The source excitation goes to the
center (level) wire on the middle segment of the bridge wire. From
the corresponding segments on the upper and lower section, run
600-Ohm transmission lines to the source segment. The
impedance is not critical, because the lines will be only 0.000001-
wavelength long, a number that the modeler specifies in the
transmission line entry. Hence, the three wires have a common
source in parallel, while preventing the inter-penetration of any
wires.
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while the medium spacing (twice the narrow spacing) reduces the
range to 134 Ohms--for the same set of load values.
Let's increase the maximum wire spacing at array midline one more
time. We shall again double the spacing to 0.05-wavelength (about
4.3 m or 14.1'). All other parameters remain the same. Each outer
leg is now about 0.0003-wavelength longer than the level center
wire--about 1". With all other model parameters unchanged, we
obtain the following table of modeled values.
Performance of a Separated 3-Wire Rhombic with 4-Wavelength Legs and
Various Terminating Resistors
Wide (0.05-Wavelength) Maximum Wire Separation
Terminating Maximum Front-Back Feedpoint Z
Resistor (Ohms) Gain dBi Ratio R+/-jX Ohms
400 18.88 17.79 607 + j 59
500 18.88 22.46 638 + j 37
600 18.89 28.31 664 + j 23
650 * 18.89 29.64 676 - j 10
700 18.90 28.16 686 - j 14
800 18.91 23.71 707 - j 9
900 18.92 20.62 724 - j 38
1000 18.93 18.50 738 - j 56
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The use of 3-wires, whatever the spacing, does not change the
essential elements of the rhombic pattern. Fig. 5 compares the
patterns for the blunt single-wire model and for the widest 3-wire
model in both separate patterns and with an overlay. The overlaid
patterns show the comparative raw gain of each lobe. The separate
pattern establishes that there is no essential change in the relative
strength of the lobes. The only exception, of course, is the 180-
degree lobe.
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Multi-Element Rhombics
suppression. Fig. 7 shows both the general outline and the critical
dimensions.
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The best single rhombic for comparison with the dual version is the
model using 5-wavelength legs. It is only slightly longer overall (9.4
wavelengths vs. 8.95 wavelengths for the dual rhombic). The
following table presents some of the basic performance data.
A Preliminary Comparison of Equal Length Single and Dual Rhombics
Antenna Leg Length Elevation Max. Gain Front-Back Beamwidth Feedpoint Z
WL Angle deg dBi Ratio dB degrees R +/- jX
Ohms
Single 5 13 17.97 44.71 12.8 867 + j23
Dual 3.5/6.0 12 19.82 25.03 12.2 447 + j 9
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Conclusion
The rhombic is perhaps the largest and most refined of the long-
wire antennas, consisting of two Vs, open-end to open-end. The
result is 4 wires contributing aligned lobes for higher gain and
narrower beamwidth. Although the rhombic suppresses unwanted
sidelobes better than the V antenna, significant sidelobes remain.
The effort to further suppress the sidelobes has resulted in the
development of more complex rhombic designs using multiple
rhombic elements offset from each other. Although the
unterminated rhombic is usable and has more gain than the
terminated version, the gain differential is less than for other types
of long-wire antennas. If we optimally design a terminated rhombic-
-by reference to the correct wire angle relative to the antenna
height and leg length--we may obtain at least a 2:1 frequency ratio
of high performance at a nearly constant feedpoint impedance.
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I
n the late 1950s, Edmund Laport of RCA hand calculated a
number of improved rhombic-type antennas. The improvements
for a dual rhomboid consisted in the main of higher gain (with
claims of 27 dB over a dipole) and lower side lobe values. The
horizontal beamwidth was calculated at about 11 degrees to -3 dB
points. Thus the antennas represent appropriate choices for fixed
point-to-point communications or reception.
In this note, I shall focus on the 1296 MHz version of the antenna
derived from the work of W8DMR as revised by W3EP, since that is
likely the antenna design most accessible to most hams.
Apparently, W3EP scaled the antenna design from a 1255 MHz
ATV version in Parker's article. Among the claims made for the
antenna are the following of interest to an inveterate modeler. 1.
The gain may be 20 dB better than a dipole. 2. The antenna allows
for "sloppy" construction without jeopardy to success.
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There are two sets of antennas to be explored: the QST model and
the CATJ versions derived directly from Laport's analysis. In this
part, I shall look only at the QST model. One important reason for
this is that modeling the antenna is tempting for anyone with a
basic modeling program using NEC-2. However, creating a useful (I
shall not use the term "precise") model of the Laport dual rhomboid
is not so easy a task as it may seem, and I shall point to some
dangers in the enterprise before seeing what the QST model yields.
A single rhombic antenna that is 8 wl long will tax many basic NEC-
2 modeling programs. The core will handle the geometry easily, but
the number of segments required to achieve a relevant degree of
convergence (as a test of model adequacy) may quickly approach
the standard 500-segment limit attached to basic programs. If we
create a dual rhomboid antenna with closely spaced wires crossing
each other and sharp angles, the number of segments required for
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The wires for the longer and shorter sides are equally highly
segmented. I developed two models, the chief difference between
them appearing in Fig. 1A.
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Wire Conn.--- End 1 (x,y,z : in) Conn.--- End 2 (x,y,z : in) Dia(in) Segs
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Modeling Results
The data derived from the models will appear mostly in tabular
form, with a few patterns interspersed. This is a consequence of my
usual procedures of systematically exploring certain variables in the
antenna design.
Although the gain does not change in practical terms, it does show
a peak with #16 copper wire. Interestingly, the QST article
suggested that #12 would be the smallest wire likely to be used. I
am not certain that is a sound statement, since the #16 version of
the model also showed the highest front-to-side lobe ratio. Note
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A 3-D view of the pattern, shown in Fig. 4, can give us a better view
of what is happening with the main side lobe--or side lobes. First,
we must allow for the fact that the reduced resolution of the 3-D
pattern converts smooth petals into crystalline points. Nonetheless,
we can see that the main side lobe is actually a series of undulating
lobes and nulls around the main lobe. (Those given to such things
can make any sort of desired Rorschach test out of the 3-D
pattern.)
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One final question that occurred to me resulted from the claims that
the dual rhomboid forgives sloppy construction. In more precise
form, one may ask to what degree the antenna may be frequency
sensitive. As a partial answer to this question, I ran Model A
through a few wire sizes but on the ATV frequency of 1255 MHz,
about 3% lower. (Some claims for the broad-banded nature of the
antenna suggested that +/- 40% of the design frequency would be
usable.) The following table compares the results for Model A at
1296 and 1255 MHz for 3 wire sizes, using the standard 600-Ohm
terminating resistors.
Model A (1581 segments)
Moreover, the realizable gain from at least the QST version of the
antenna is considerably less than claims derived from theory (which
rarely takes into account wire losses). What I hope to squeeze time
for is a look at the dimensions derived more directly from Laport's
work--perhaps something in the 100 MHz range (about 8 times
longer than the 1296 MHz model). When I am semi-satisfied with
models of that antenna, I shall add Part 2 to this report on modeling
the dual rhomboid.
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I
n looking at the CATJ article referenced in Chapter 58 of these
notes, I was initially struck by the fact that the author tried to
show as exactly as possible the dimensions of a true Laport dual
rhomboid. Modeling this antenna might provide a comparison with
the 1296 MHz QST model examined in Chapter 58.
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The dimensions for the narrow and wide models are as follows,
using #12 AWG copper wire and the prescribed 600-Ohm loads.
Refer to Fig. 6 to place each dimension.
Narrow Model
0-A 31' A-A' 30.30'
0-B 56' B-B' 38.12'
0-C 88.5' C-C' 7.8'
Wide Model
0-A 31' A-A' 31.50'
0-B 56' B-B' 39.35'
0-C 88.5' C-C' 7.8'
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Both models show less gain than the 1296 MHz model, but
considerably better front-to-back ratio with the prescribed 600-Ohm
terminating resistors. The beamwidth at 100 MHz is wider by a
small amount, and the front-to-side lobe ratio is better, also by a
small amount. Perhaps the major fact that becomes evident,
especially in the narrow model, is the reduction in the amount of
power overall in the rearward lobes. Every lobe past 60 degrees
from the main lobe is down by at least 20 dB and mostly more. One
goal of the Laport dual rhomboid design is at least partially met in
these models.
To see what effect wire size might have on performance, I ran the
wide model using wire sizes from #12 through 0.5" in diameter.
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It may be the case that using a single wire size of #6 AWG may be
the most practical compromise for a 100 MHz dual rhomboid. Wire
of this size or larger might best be aluminum for weight saving.
Therefore, I compared the performance figures for both #12 and
0.5" wire in copper and aluminum.
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As I did with the 1296 MHz model, I checked the new models to
determine whether different values of terminating resistors would
yield better performance than the standard 600-Ohm values. As a
quick reference, here are numbers for the wide models using #12
wire and using #6 wire (copper).
#12 Copper Wire
#6 Copper Wire
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The gain of this model (and likewise, the narrow model) rises very
slowly (insignificantly so) as the value of the terminating resistors
increases. However, the front-to-back ratio shows a peak that result
from the interrelationship of the wire size and the terminating
resistor values. The 650-Ohm value for #6 wire is close to the value
recommended by Laport's original design. For reference, Fig. 10
shows the azimuth pattern for the #6 wire wide model with the
optimal terminating resistor values.
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Fig. 11 presents the free-space azimuth pattern for the scaled QST
model as adjusted. Note the slightly higher gain and front-to-back
ratio, but the narrower beamwidth and lower front-to-side lobe ratio.
Among the more subtle features to notice when comparing patterns
is the first lobe off the main lobe. In the narrow and wide CATJ
models, it is a low-level distinct lobe. In the scaled QST model, the
first lobe is stronger and melds with the main lobe. Whether
features like these make an operational difference in most ham
circumstances is dubious. However, they are interesting
theoretically when considering what Laport was trying to
accomplish with his design.
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If the side lobes are not especially troublesome, the scaled QST
1296 MHz model may be the more advantageous design,
considering the gain, front-to-back ratio, and feedpoint impedance.
However, if the power to the rearward lobes is of concern for a
particular operation, the CATJ version may end up as more
suitable.
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Where the wires of the legs join, the spacing between leg pairs can
be widened or narrowed. Narrowing the spacing tends to push
reactance further into the capacitive region. Widening the spacing
pushed the reactance less capacitive and more toward inductive.
Although the models may not predict the exact reactance value to
be encountered with a dual rhomboid, the trends should be quite
reliable in field adjusting the feedpoint reactance.
Conclusion
By judiciously using the figure that emerged from the 1296 MHz
model and those that emerged with these 100-MHz models, it is
possible to estimate the properties of scaled versions of the dual
rhomboid for 144-, 225-, and 440-MHz versions of the antenna. The
key item to remember is that the "standard" #12 wire becomes
effectively fatter relative to a wavelength as the frequency
increases.
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It may be useful to add one more part to this series to provide some
basis for the individual to decide if the dual rhomboid is indeed the
way to go.
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I
n thinking about building a dual rhomboid, we should carefully
evaluate whether the results will be worth the effort involved.
Despite its inexpensiveness at UHF, the dual rhomboid is not the
simplest antenna to build.
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Fig. 13 provides the essential dimensions for the 100 MHz single-
wire rhombic. At 79.3' long by 38.6' wide, the antenna occupies a
footprint just a tad smaller than the dual rhomboids. The model
description follows.
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Wire Conn.--- End 1 (x,y,z : ft) Conn.--- End 2 (x,y,z : ft) Dia(in) Segs
As I did for the CATJ dual rhomboid models, I ran the scaled single-
wire rhombic through various wire sizes to develop a sense of the
trends in performance. Note the reduction of the terminating
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resistor to 600 Ohms from the HF value of 800 Ohms. Here are the
results.
Wire Dia. Gain F-B B/W F/S Feed Z
Size In. dBi dB deg dB R+/-jX
12 0.0808 13.85 45.30 11.4 8.50 625 - 96
10 0.1019 13.93 34.76 11.4 8.53 606 - 105
8 0.1285 14.01 29.84 11.4 8.56 585 - 114
6 0.1620 14.09 26.68 11.4 8.59 563 - 122
4 0.2043 14.16 24.40 11.4 8.61 540 - 130
2 0.2576 14.24 22.57 11.4 8.65 516 - 137
Fig. 14 presents the free space azimuth pattern for the single-wire
rhombic using #12 wire, where the terminating resistor has been
optimized for maximum 180-degree front-to-back ratio. Obvious
from the figure is the fact that a 180-degree front-to-back ratio
reveals the rearward lobe behavior over only a very small portion of
the rear quadrants. The number is impressive on paper only.
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Optimizing the front-to-back ratio for wire sizes other that #12 AWG
will require adjustment of the terminating resistor. Larger wire
versions may be preferable to the #12 model in order to increase
both the antenna gain and the front-to-side lobe ratio.
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The red and blue patterns in Fig. 15 clearly show the higher gain of
the dual rhomboid. However, with respect to the other lobes in the
pattern, only the positions and not the strengths change from one
pattern to the next. With respect to the secondary lobes, there is
not much to choose between a single-wire rhombic and a dual
rhomboid. Of course, this must be qualified with the recognition that
the models in this collection may not have caught the precise
dimensions that yield maximum lobe control. However, we have
looked at enough models to suggest that if there is such a "perfect"
dimension set, it is unlikely to be replicated in the home workshop.
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In terms of forward gain, the difference between the best 100 MHz
#12 wire dual rhomboid and the #12 wire single rhombic is less
than 1.7 dB.
A 16-Element Yagi
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Wire Conn.--- End 1 (x,y,z : ft) Conn.--- End 2 (x,y,z : ft) Dia(in) Segs
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Fig. 17 presents the free space azimuth pattern for the 16-element
Yagi. For comparative purposes, the modeled performance figures
at 100 MHz are these.
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Conclusion
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Let us assume that Laport used true rhombi, with parallel sides.
The result is a set of calculations, sketched in Fig. 18.
The figure shows only one of the two rhombi. The horizontal line
will have coordinates 0,0 at the left.
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Side a, from the through horizontal line upward to the end of L1 will
equal sin A * L1 = 15.144'. Side b, from the through horizontal line
downward to the end of L2 will equal sin B * L2 = 19.067'. If the
sides are parallel, the distance c will equal side b - side a = 3.923'.
Distance d from the origin to the end of L1 will equal cos A * L1 =
30.915'. Distance e from the origin to the end of L2 will equal cos B
* L2 = 57.031'. Distance f from the origin to the far peak of the
rhombus will equal d + e = 87.946'.
Wire Conn.--- End 1 (x,y,z : ft) Conn.--- End 2 (x,y,z : ft) Dia(in) Segs
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The following results were obtained for #12 and #6 copper wire. In
the table, the given value of terminating resistor--chosen for the
best front- to-back ratio--represents a series combination of two
load resistors in the model description. The feedpoint impedance
given is the composite parallel impedance for the two sources
connected in parallel. The rhombi are vertically separated 0.2'
(2.4").
Wire Dia. Res. Gain F-B B/W F/S Feed Z
Size In. Ohms dBi dB deg dB R+/-jX
12 .0808 600 15.01 23.38 12.4 12.10 398 - 122
6 .1620 550 15.08 23.48 12.4 11.94 348 - 130
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The Laport antenna does indeed have potential for controlling the
side lobes of the rhombic configuration. Only 3 forward side lobes
rise much above -20 dB relative to the main lobe, and they are
down by more than 12 dB. The reduction in rearward lobes is
significantly improved relative to any of the preceding models used
in these notes. Whether or not this model has succeeded in
capturing the Laport dual rhombic in exact precision, it is clear that
Laport was on the right track in his efforts to reduce side lobes from
rhombic antennas. Perhaps the only thing not yielded by the design
is the absolute maximum in gain.
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which rises as the wires are brought closer together. If the spacing
is increased, we obtain a lower source impedance, higher gain,
high front-to-side lobe ratio, and--up to a peak value--higher front-
to-back ratio. I ran a small table of ever-increasing spacing using
the #12 wire, 600-Ohgm terminating resistor model, and I obtained
the following results.
Space Space Gain F-B B/W F/S Feed Z
Feet WL dBi dB deg dB R+/-jX
0.2 0.020 15.01 23.38 12.4 12.10 398 - 122
0.4 0.041 15.05 29.04 12.4 12.18 342 - 105
0.6 0.061 15.07 34.27 12.4 12.23 316 - 88
0.8 0.081 15.08 35.21 12.4 12.26 303 - 77
1.0 0.102 15.10 33.13 12.4 12.30 295 - 68
1.2 0.122 15.11 31.45 12.4 12.32 290 - 62
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F
rom time to time, interest reemerges in some long-standing
designs for compact planar (2- dimensional) beams.
Unfortunately the interest seems to focus on a single design
at a time rather than on the design as a member of a family of
designs. Equally unfortunately, the interest usually stems from the
publication of some peak performance figures for a particular
design rather than from the antenna's performance across an entire
band. Consequently, misunderstandings of antenna potentials
multiply endlessly.
Under any name, the family has two branches: those whose center
structures form Vees that point at each other bottom to bottom and
those whose centers parallel each other. Among the features that
clan members have in common is a flat structure with an area that
is just over 0.6 square wavelengths--in other words, about 1/4 by
1/4 wavelength. Hence, the lure of the family is its compact size.
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The peak gain and 180-degree front-to-back ratio figures can give a
misimpression. The peak gain of about 6 dBi (free space) rivals that
of a 2-element Yagi whose elements take twice the space side-to-
side. Likewise, the peak 180-degree front-to-back ration of over 32
dB sounds impressive. However, the patterns in Fig. 3 tell a
somewhat different tale (as do the passband graphs we have
viewed. An averaged front-to-rear ratio for the entire rear area of
the beam has, within the 200 kHz of prime operation, a value of
between 10 and 15 dB--no better than a common 2-element driver-
reflector Yagi. The Yagi would also have superior gain over X-beam
at every frequency and be able to cover the entire 20-meter band.
A 2-element Yagi with about 1/8 wavelength element spacing and
loaded elements that are about 3/4ths full size would occupy about
the same area as the X-beam with broader performance curves.
Hence, the folded X-beam has fallen into relative disuse.
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Fig. 6 shows free-space azimuth patterns for the first 200 kHz of 20
meters. The pattern at 14.1 MHz is well controlled, but off peak, the
rearward pattern spreads to average values in the 15 dB range.
Beyond 14.2 MHz, the rearward pattern spreads larger and the
forward gain decreases rapidly.
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In general, like the X-beam and other beams based upon vee-ing
the center parts of the elements, the hex beam shows a quite
narrow operating bandwidth relative to gain and front-to-back ratio.
The rate and total gain change across the band and the band-edge
front-to-back ratio values are very important in evaluating the
operating bandwidth of an antenna.
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The VK2ABQ Square (and the Moxon Rectangle) are more fully
described in "Modeling and Understanding Small Beams: Part 2:
VK2ABQ Squares and The Modified Moxon Rectangle,"
Communications Quarterly, (Spring, 1995), 55-70. The origins of
the square go back to the 1930s, only to disappear and re-emerge
in the 1960s. Fig. C shows the outlines of a modified square. The
modification consists of loading the reflector with a shorted
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transmission line stub about 6" long to move the peak performance
point without disturbing the square shape.
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SWR curve is very flat indeed. A 2:1 balun would permit operation
across the entire 20-meter band with an exceptionally low SWR
and no conditions to incur losses within the balun.
The VK2ABQ was the basis for the later Moxon Rectangle. The key
performance feature absorbed from the square was the excellent
control of the rear portion of the radiation pattern. Fig. 9 shows the
band-edge and mid-band pattern for the square. If the square is
constructed of 1" aluminum tubing, the band-edge front-to-back
ratio improves to nearly 20 dB, with a small increase in array gain
as well.
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The #12 copper wire model for this study reveals that the side-to-
side length is about 3/8 wavelength, while the front-to-back size is
about 1/8 wavelength. Hence, the total area of the antenna is less
than the 1/4 wavelength squares, although the turn radius is
greater. The details of the model used here are as follows:
Moxon rectangle Frequency = 14.175 MHz.
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The gain curve in Fig. 10 for the Moxon is a full dB better than for
the square, although the total change in gain across the band is
about the same. Since the Moxon rectangle can easily be
fabricated of aluminum tubing, the result will be another 0.2 dB of
gain and slightly less change in the gain across the band. As well,
the band-edge front-to-back ratio values will improve to nearly 20
dB from the wire values of 15 dB. As with all of the semi-closed
geometry designs, the front-to-back ratio is peaked just below the
center of the band in order to achieve relatively similar front-to-back
values at the band edges.
Both the square and the Moxon use the combination of parallel
element coupling and end-coupling to achieve a very high front-to-
back ratio at a design frequency. Indeed, in both cases, the current
magnitude and phasing on the parasitic element center is very
close to the precise values needed for a maximum front-to-back
ratio if each element were to be independently fed and phased.
Only the existence of the "tails" which radiate (if only weakly),
prevents the pattern from becoming the deep dimple of a perfectly
phased pair of elements.
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I have over the years built and used most of the designs we have
discussed here in 10-meter versions, using both wire and aluminum
construction. The models employed here are variants of those
antennas, as well as of published data. No commercial antennas
are modeled for these notes. Their intent is simply to show both the
resemblances and differences among members of the end-coupled
clan of beams.
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S
ome time back, I wrote a piece for Communications Quarterly
on the Extended Double Zepp ("Modeling and Understanding
Small Beams: Part 3: The EDZ Family of Antennas," Fall,
1995, 53-71). My hope was to improve our understanding of the
EDZ and look at some of its possibilities.
Brian Egan, ZL1LE and I had been discussing EDZ potentials since
about 1991. He initially suggested a 2-element beam consisting of
an EDZ driven element plus two Yagi-type reflector elements
spaced a few feet behind the driven element and each pushed
sideways to the wire end limits of the driven element. Modeling this
configuration seemed to make a different arrangement preferable.
From this arose the 2-element (driven element- reflector) beam
noted in the article. The center of each element is inductively
loaded, one for matching the feedline, the other for optimizing the
rear element as a reflector. With 1/2 wavelength parallel lines down
to near ground level, the two matching/loading units could be
reversed, reversing the direction of the beam. This installation was
tested for a couple of years at W4RNL and worked quite credibly.
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Well, folks, as the old song says, "Everything old is new again." Bill
McDowell, K4CIA, sent me a copy of an article from the June,
1938, QST, "The Extended Double-Zepp Antenna." In the back
pages is a description of how to add a parasitical element to the
EDZ. Author Hugo Romander, W2NB, describes a 0.2 wavelength
spaced array. The driven element is stub matched to the source
feedline. The other element is stub loaded inductively, but at two
points: one for use as a reflector, the other for use as a director.
Hence, a different system for a reversible beam--and a perfectly
competent one. W2NB's system has the advantage of simplicity,
while ours has the advantage of convenience. It can be fun to
discover that one has reinvented the wheel. Fortunately, the
information I added to the end of my article reviewing the principles
of stub matching and loading would aid one to replicate the W2NB
EDZ beam, so I do not feel totally disconnected from the 1938
work.
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Henry has chosen the double-Yagi version, and very likely wisely
so. Since he plans to put it at 60' for 10 meters, let's look at
modeling results for both arrangements centered at 28.5 MHz.
The 3-wire EDZ beam can be built from 3 41'8" lengths of #12 wire,
each with a center load. The director requires about 800 ohms, the
reflector 1150 ohms, and the driven element 980 ohms. The
resulting antenna has a resonant feed resistance of about 90-95
ohms, just about right for a 1/4 wl matching section of 70 ohm coax
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to the regular 50-ohm feedline. You can make the director and
reflector inductive loads from coils or from 450-ohm parallel vinyl
covered feedline stubs 5.5' and 6.25' long each. If you do not use a
split coil for the driven element feed point, you may wish to design a
stub matching system--or perhaps use an ATU and parallel line all
the way.
The potential beam performance at 60' is quite good: 15.5 dBi gain
with about 30 dB front-to-back ratio. Adding the director to our old
2-element EDZ beam really improves the front-to-back ratio more
than it helps raw gain.
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The double Yagi EDZ tells a somewhat different story. WB4HFL did
not give me detailed dimensions, so I modeled my own version,
with directors and reflectors spaced 5' from the driven element.
Parasitical elements had outer limits in line with the end of the EDZ
element (41'8"). Reflectors were 17'1" and directors were 16'0.5"
long. #12 wire, of course, for consistency throughout.
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Second, the only adjustment needed across the band is the driven
element tuning. Like its counterpart, the double-Yagi version shows
a 250-ohm reactance excursion across the band, along with a 75-
ohm change in the resistive component. However, parallel feedline
and a good ATU would take care of the problem. Because of the
high reactance-to-resistance ratio, one might have to carefully
select the line length in order to present the ATU with a load it can
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One question that often arises with EDZ beams is how do we get
rid of the ears in the pattern, those quartering side lobes. W1GQL,
David Billheimer, sent me a design that accomplishes just that--an
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Band A B C
14 43 53.5 11.5
21 27.5 35.5 7.7
The best points for installing the parallel line stubs in the 15-meter
model were actually 1.5' farther inboard than W6QVI suggests:
about 29' from the ends and 34' from the antenna center. 67°
proved the length required for maximum gain. The feedpoint
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Let's carry the experiment one step further. To each of the vertically
stacked EDZ arrays, one might arrange a series of 1/2 wl reflectors
to achieve some further forward gain and reduce the rear lobe.
Alternatively, one might place a second vertically stacked array 1/8
wl behind the original vertical stack. Then, feed the rear array with a
current magnitude and phase to maximize forward gain and front-
to-back ratio. At 21.2 MHz, the spacing would be just about 5.8'.
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Antennas spaced 1/8 wl apart call for 135° phase differences in the
elements on the currents: this is the received wisdom.
Unfortunately, it is wrong. Dipoles with this spacing might call for
something close to this figure. However, for any two elements
spaced more than a small fraction of a wavelength but less than 1/4
wl, there will be for each spacing a relative current magnitude and
phase for the rear element that will yield maximum gain and
maximum front-to-back ratio. With real materials, these two maxima
may occur on very slightly different frequencies. For the array
shown here, the maxima occurred with the rear elements fed at
0.75 the forward element current at a phase angle of 142 degrees.
Slightly better performance might have been obtained if the upper
and lower phased pairs had been individually optimized.
We are still far from done with the EDZ. I am looking forward to the
next step. These notes are simply the update so far. I'll add more
as soon as I learn more about this interesting antenna. If I read
enough old articles, I could learn more very shortly.
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T
ypically, Extended Double Zepp (EDZ) users employ one of
two methods in feeding this highly capacitively reactive 1.25
wl long antenna. Some users, especially those who employ
the antenna as a simple center-fed long wire on bands other than
the design band, simply use parallel feedline and an ATU. Others,
with single-band use in mind, use a matching stub arrangement to
find a 50-ohm point for a coax feedline. Of course, one can also
place a split coil at the feedpoint to provide the inductive reactance
necessary to cancel out the antenna's inherent capacitive
reactance, although the resulting resistive impedance will still be
100 ohms or greater.
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When two of these assemblies are put end to end, the coax center
conductors are the two terminals making up the feedpoint. The
braid ends are about an inch or two apart (and must NOT be
connected together). The result is a nearly purely resistive
feedpoint impedance of 100 ohms in the 2-meter model. Rick uses
a 75-ohm 1/4 wl (+ 1/2 wl added) to make a combination matching
section and balun for a 50-ohm coax feedline.
The delay line is interesting, because the name does not describe
its function. Actually, it is a simple shorted feedline stub providing
the inductive reactance necessary to cancel the antenna's
capacitive reactance. Let's look at the figure to see the evolution of
the arrangement.
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Although the final arrangement looks like a Tee match, it is not. The
center must have a gap, forming at best a split-T top. The open
ends of the non-feedpoint center are actually the ends of the
inductive stubs away from the feedpoint and thus must be kept
independent of each other by a gap.
The use of coax was possible in the original model, because the
resistive portion of the feedpoint impedance was near 50 ohms on
each side of center (for the 100-ohm total). Hence, the use of 50-
ohm coax did not alter the feedpoint impedance.
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In the field of antennas for NVIS service, there are many options.
Fortunately, most of them involve rather basic antenna designs.
Antenna Analysis Conventions Used in These Notes
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The height above ground for a NVIS antenna is perhaps the key
ingredient to the formation of the basic far-field or radiation pattern.
Sometimes, individual elevation patterns (in this case, broadside
patterns) can be misleading, as is the case with the patterns on the
left in Fig. 6. The upper pattern, with the antenna 0.4-λ above
average ground, is clearly less than optimal for NVIS work. The
pattern shows a distinct null at the zenith angle.
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The chief limiting factor is the ground calculation system. Only the
Sommerfeld-Norton (SN) calculation system has sufficient accuracy
to provide usable data on horizontal antennas closer than about
0.2-λ above ground. The SN system is a part of both the NEC-2
and NEC-4 calculating cores. One implementation of MININEC
called Antenna Model has successfully grafted the SN system to its
core. NEC contains an alternative ground calculation system that
uses a Reflection Coefficient Approximation (RCA). The simplified
calculations originally allowed faster core runs in the days of slow-
speed personal and mainframe computers, but the results grow
more inaccurate as any horizontal wire approaches ground level.
Even less accurate is the ground calculation system that is part of
the public domain version of MININEC (abbreviated here as a
ground calculation system as MIN). In fact, the MIN system
produces only feedpoint impedance values for perfect ground and
not for the soil quality specified for the far-field pattern.
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For each antenna height, the table reports the maximum gain and
the TO (take-off) angle (the elevation angle of maximum gain) in
degrees elevation. In some cases, the angle is close to but not
exactly the zenith angle, because there is a range of elevation
angles over which the gain does not change. The dipole is
resonant in NEC-4 at 0.4-λ above ground and does not change its
dimension as the height decreases. Therefore, the columns
labeled R and X show the feedpoint resistance and reactance that
results from using the unadjusted dipole.
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The end result is that we must set aside virtually all old reports
on the performance of antennas installed at NVIS heights. In
fact, we must begin again with an evaluation of basic antennas
using only antenna modeling software with the SN ground. In
fact, these notes will employs NEC-4 throughout, with the SN
ground calculation system implemented. Equally important to
our effort will be a systematic exploration of basic antennas
using a variety of ground quality conditions.
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For our work, we shall use Very Good and Very Poor soil as
extremes and Average soil as an intermediate value set between
the two. Between any two of the three value sets, you can
interpolate values close to reality.
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below about 1e10-4 and permittivity values that drop close to the
minimum value of 1 (the value of a vacuum), the region beneath the
antenna begins to act more like a free-space environment than like
what we think of as earth. The effect has interesting consequences
for practical antenna operation.
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T
he most fundamental NVIS antennas for fixed station
operations are the linear dipole, the inverted-V dipole, and
the 1-λ closed loop. Each has its own set of mechanical
advantages and disadvantages in terms of the complexity of
installation. Despite the very commonness of these antennas, their
properties when installed at heights appropriate to NVIS operations
remain somewhat murky to many radio amateurs. Advice ranges
from the idea of placing the antenna as close to the ground as
possible to placing it as high as may be feasible.
Of all NVIS antennas, the linear dipole is the most basic. Fig. 1
outlines the dipole and the critical properties necessary to examine
its performance at possible eights above ground. We shall start with
a 40-meter dipole and then proceed to lower frequencies. We shall
evaluate each dipole at heights from 0.075-λ up to 0.255-λ in 0.01-λ
increments.
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The basic data collected for the 40-meter dipole appears in Table
1. The table has separate sections for each soil quality. The left-
most columns list the antenna height in wavelengths and in feet.
The uppermost height used is 0.255-λ, just over ¼-λ, which is only
about 35’ above ground. Hence, on 40, at most installation sites,
the antenna height falls wholly within the operator’s range of
choice. On lower bands, not all heights may be feasible.
The gain columns record zenith or straight-up gain on the left. The
maximum gain column only has entries where the value differs from
the zenith gain value. Both values are in dBi. The need for the
second column results from the standard evolution of the NVIS
pattern with increasing antenna height. Fig. 2 shows a sample set
of patterns for a 160-meter NVIS dipole at several heights above
very poor ground. Patterns for 75 and 40 meters and for other soil
qualities will be similar, although the final step of showing different
zenith and maximum gain values varies in height with different soil
qualities. As the antenna height increases, the broadside
beamwidth grows continuously, while the endwise beamwidth
varies by slightly.
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At a height near the upper limit of our sampling range, the elevation
pattern begins to split into broadside lobes, resulting in two
maximum gain directions with a slightly depressed zenith gain
value. The broadside elevation patterns and the 3-dimensional “top-
down” plots provide alternative views of the phenomenon. The
broadside axis line has a constant total length from the 3-D plot
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The final columns of the table list the feedpoint resistance and
reactance at each height. Horizontal antennas close to ground
undergo considerable swings of feedpoint impedance values, a fact
recorded by the data in the tables. As we change the quality of the
ground beneath the antenna, we also encounter some interesting
variations in feedpoint impedance values for each height in the
survey.
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The trends that we have noted relative to the 40-meter and 75-
meter dipoles continue unabated when we examine a 160-meter
dipole (set for 1.85 MHz in this sample). If the patterns hold true,
we should expect higher maximum gain values, lower optimal gain
heights (in wavelengths), lower maximum beamwidth ratio values,
and a greater height of feedpoint resistance convergence. Table 3
provides the numerical data to confirm each of these trends, while
Fig. 7 and Fig. 8 supply visual references for the gain and
feedpoint resistance curves. Indeed, with only a few exceptions, we
may bypass extensive commentary on the 160-meter dipole’s
behavior, although we can hardly avoid a note on the usual
amateur 160-meter horizontal antenna installation.
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For the most typical amateur installations, a height of 35’ falls below
the lowest height in the survey. In fact, at 35’ above ground, a 160-
meter dipole will lose between 1.5 dB (over very good soil) to 2.8
dB over very poor soil relative to placing the antenna at an optimal
NVIS height. Since the gain of the antenna at 160 meters is higher
for a given height (in wavelengths) above any given soil quality, the
deficit is not quite as severe as the internal 160-meter numbers
suggest, but the installation at a low height has far less
performance potential than it might have. As well, at the low height,
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We may better gauge the relative gain for the three bands covered
by this survey by graphically sampling at least one set of antennas.
Fig. 9 compares the gain values over average ground for 160-, 75-,
and 40-meter dipoles across the surveyed heights as measured in
wavelengths. Just the change in operating frequency produces
nearly a full dB difference in maximum gain when we take the
values that coincide with the maximum zenith gain for each band.
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The 1-λ loop is subject to the same constraints as the dipole. The
height above ground and the quality of the ground both below the
antenna and in the region of far-field reflections largely determine
the pattern shape and strength. Mechanically, the side dimension of
the loop is about half that of a dipole, but the loop does require 4
support posts and occupies an area at the installation site. As well,
the loop feedpoint impedance is higher than the impedance of a
dipole, resulting in the need for a matching section if the main
feedline is a standard 50-Ω coaxial cable.
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The gain curves in Fig. 11 are very similar to those for the dipole,
with two major exceptions. First, the values at all heights are higher
for the loop. (Whether the added gain justifies the more complex
construction is a user judgment.) Second, the loop has a narrower
broadside beamwidth and a very slightly wider endwise beamwidth
at all heights. Hence, the column for maximum gain in the table is
blank, since the broadside beamwidth never reaches a value that
creates a dual line for the maximum gain direction. In essence, the
loop more closely approximates the circular pattern that represents
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If you compare Table 5 with Table 1, you will discover that the
maximum gain occurs at the same heights over each type of
ground quality for both loops and dipoles. As well, the feedpoint
resistance tends to converge in the same manner as we found for
the dipole, although the convergence is less complete in the case
of the loop. The loop’s convergence region is considerably wider as
a span of heights, so we may bypass a graph. However, the tabular
data will show the spread. Of special note are the beamwidth
numbers, especially the ratio of broadside to endwise beamwidth.
Note that the loop and the dipole both use the same wire: for 40
meters, AWG #14 copper wire.
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As both the graphs and the tables make clear, the heights of
maximum gain on 75 meters are virtually identical for both the loop
and the dipole. Unlike either antenna at 40 meters, where we may
easily construct the antenna at the optimal height, on 75 meters, we
may need to be satisfied with a slightly lesser height. The loop is
like the dipole in the fact that gain does not fall off sharply over any
of the soil types as we lower the antenna by modest amounts.
However, the effect may be more noticeable over the worst soils
where the maximum gain height in wavelengths is greatest, while
the antenna construction project may have a strict physical limit.
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For example, compare the gain values at 35’ (about 0.14-λ) with the
maximum gain possible for each of the individual ground quality
values.
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Perhaps the most limiting factor for the 160-meter loop, which also
applies to the 160-meter dipole, is the physical height limit to which
most horizontal antennas are subject on that band. The lowest
height on the survey is almost 40’ (for 0.075-λ), which is very much
below the height of maximum gain, even over the best of soil
qualities. This height presents deficits of gain, as well as
considerably different feedpoint resistance values. Moreover, the
feedpoint resistance values (assuming one field adjusts the
antenna to resonance) vary considerably with soil quality at the
very low height. Almost inevitably, then, any 160-meter NVIS
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station. Nevertheless, the differences are real and may play a role
in operations under difficult physical or ionospheric conditions.
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The table also contains an extra set of columns showing the zenith
gain advantage of the loop over the dipole when we set each
antenna at the height of maximum gain (a height that is the same
for each antenna type over each soil type). The gain advantage of
the loop increases as we reduce the quality of the ground in the
antenna region. Fig. 16 graphs all 6 of the relevant gain curves (3
for the dipole and 3 for the loop) to shows the variation in the loop’s
advantage over the full spectrum of surveyed heights. The curves
appear in pairs for each of the soil quality value sets. For each pair,
the loop is always the higher curve. One interesting facet of
comparing the curves is the more rapid drop in gain of the dipole
above the height of maximum zenith gain. The loop curves are
shallower above the maximum gain height. Below the height of
maximum gain, the dipole and loop curves show a highly parallel
shape. You may correlate this data to the beamwidth ratio
information in the following way. At the maximum surveyed height,
the dipole has already passed the beamwidth at which the
broadside pattern begins to split into two lobes, but the loop
beamwidth remains short of that value.
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These comparative notes on the dipole and the 1-λ loop as NVIS
antennas make no decisions about which one (or which height)
may be best for a given installation. That decision rests on the total
span of considerations that go into planning and building an
antenna with a certain set of mission specifications. The whole
point of the extensive notes, graphs, and tables is to provide
sufficient background information on the anticipated electrical
performance of the antennas to make the decision as well informed
as possible. However, among our basic antennas, we still have one
more to consider. The inverted-V dipole is a form of dipole, but has
a special property when placed close to ground in a NVIS
environment: the V-shape.
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The 30° inverted-V sets some limits to the lowest height at which
we can set the center point. The ends must not only clear the
ground, but as well leave a safety margin to prevent human or
animal contact with the high-voltage end of the wires. A reasonable
standard is probably about 10’. However, we shall show results for
one step below this level. On 40 meters, the minimum center height
will be 0.175-λ, which results in an end height of about 7.4’ above
ground. On 75 meters, the center minimum is 1.55-λ, for an end
height of 8.7’. The 160meter center height of 0.135-λ results in an
end height of 7.7’ above ground. For each band, we shall use the
center-height as a reference and increase that value in 0.1-λ
increments to the survey limit of 0.255-λ, regardless of whether that
value is practical on any particular band.
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9. However, the span of values is large enough for use to see some
interesting differences in V behavior relative to the behavior of the
two level antennas.
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limitation. Ground coupling to the lower wire ends and the sloping
elements combine to reduce the effective height of the V if we take
the maximum gain heights of the level antennas as standards.
Second, with a center height only at the level of the dip[ole or loop
maximum-gain heights, the V shows a much lower gain. Despite
this apparent disadvantage, the anticipated lower feedpoint
impedance values—close to the characteristic impedance of
common coaxial cable—do show up in the data set.
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The gain curves in Fig. 22 add two lower-level steps to the chart
and thereby reveal the rapidly decreasing gain level that occurs as
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the V wire ends approach ground. Even though the overall gain
level for any height (in wavelengths) is higher on 75 meters than on
40 meters, the gain of a V with its ends at about the same height on
both bands will be lower on the lower band. In addition, as we lower
the inverted-V, the feedpoint resistance shows more parallels to the
impedance of the dipole at very low levels, with a strong divergence
of values as we change the quality of soil. However, in the case of
the V, the divergence occurs largely as a result of the average
height of the antenna, not the center height. The divergence shown
by the 75meter V at its minimum height of 0.155-λ corresponds to
the divergence displayed by dipoles closer to the lower survey limit
of 0.075-λ.
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Conclusion
The three most basic NVIS antennas—the dipole, the 1-λ loop, and
the inverted-V configuration of the dipole—share many properties,
most often as a result of the close proximity of the antenna to
ground. Hence, we discovered that ground quality plays an
important role in determining the maximum possible zenith gain on
each of the bands surveyed. As well, it plays a role in setting the
optimal height for maximum zenith gain, although for all types of
antennas, precision is not necessary in order to achieve excellent
results. However, we did discover that an old idea that gives very
low heights a presumed gain advantage is simply false. Averaging
both level antennas over all soil types, a height of approximately
0.175-λ above ground places the antenna within the expanded
range of best zenith gain performance.
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The inverted-V, with its wire ends close to ground and a 30° slope
angle, presents a conundrum for the NVIS antenna builder.
Although easier to construct than either a linear dipole or a 1-λ
loop, the inverted-V antenna shows a considerable gain deficit
relative to level antennas with the same center height. The deficit
may reach up to about 2.5 dB or close the half an S-unit. Although
the inverted-V may be necessary for field antennas, a fixed station
antenna might well enjoy the advantages of one of the level
antennas.
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A
n interesting facet of basic NVIS antennas—the dipole, the
1-λ loop, and the inverted-V—is the suggestion that we can
improve antenna gain by placing some form of wire structure
below it. The possibilities are numerous, but the most common
suggestion is the addition of a single-wire element. In fact, with
proper consideration, the suggestion will work, but with limitations.
As well, there may be better, although more complex, solutions to
obtain better zenith gain from the basic NVIS antenna.
The structure that we place below the driven wire has acquired two
names, one correct, the other misplaced and misleading. The
correct name for the element is a reflector. If the reflector is a
single-wire element optimized in size for best performance, then it
is a parasitic reflector. Still, the circumstances of its use will force
us to modify the expectations that we have of such elements when
used with highly elevated beam antennas. If the structure below the
driven element consists of a screen or a series of wires parallel to
the endwise orientation of the driven element, then we have a
planar reflector (sometimes called a sheet, curtain, or screen
reflector). We shall eventually examine both types of reflectors for
NVIS applications.
We shall also discover that dipoles and 1-λ loops, despite the
similarities of their optimal heights over various ground qualities
when used alone, do not respond identically to reflector elements.
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Like almost all parasitic reflectors, the element length must exceed
the length of the resonant dipole. As well, the proper placement will
vary with the dipole’s height above the ground and with the quality
of the ground. As shown in the sketch, we may specify the
placement by two measures: the height of the dipole above ground
or the separation of the dipole from the driver. Unfortunately for
ease of analysis, both parameters tend to vary with the height of
the dipole itself and the quality of the ground beneath.
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Beginning with the 75-meter dipole, we shall again use AWG #14
copper wire for all elements. The main unit of measure will be the
wavelength, and the dipole will be 0.4803-λ long. The reflector
element will be 0.5-λ long. The reflector length theoretically will
change as we move the reflector around, but not enough to disturb
the trends that we find with a constant length. We shall catalog the
results of modeling the dipole at three heights (to reduce the
number of continuously changing variables). Heights of 0.15-λ,
0.175-λ, and 0.2-λ will surround the optimum heights over all three
of our standard ground types: very good, average, and very poor.
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As the pages following the table show (in Fig. 2 through Fig. 7) we
may graphically examine the data in two different ways. The easy
way is to graph the gain curves for each dipole height using
separate lines for each quality of soil. The first three graphs follow
this plan and resemble the curves in the last set of notes for dipoles
alone. They establish that the dipole-reflector over very good soil
has more gain at any height than equivalent systems over lesser
soil types. The three graphs vary by virtue of the dipole height since
a dipole and a dipole-reflector array both reach maximum gain at
lower dipole heights with very good ground than over lesser ground
qualities. In contrast, the lines close up somewhat as we raise the
dipole height, since the version over very good ground has passed
its optimal height, while the versions over average and very poor
soil reach their peak values at higher dipole altitudes.
subdivision the delta values for the three soil types. The maximum
improvement for an optimized reflector over very good soil is only
about 0.2 dB over very good soul. The overall performance
improvement is between 0.4 and 0.7 dB over average soil, but it
grows to a full dB or more over very poor soil.
The table shows the antenna gain of the dipole at each height over
each ground quality with no reflector. Compare the gain values to
the next two entries, which show a slightly buried reflector and one
just above ground. In both cases, the gain improvement is minimal
to marginal, at best. The reflector does not significantly improve
performance until it is well above ground. For very good soil, the
reflector height is between 0.01-λ and 0.015-λ, regardless of the
height of the dipole (within the surveyed range). Over average soil,
the best reflector heights have an equally narrow range, but a
different one: 0.025-λ to 0.03-λ. Over very poor soil, where the
reflector has maximum effect in improving the dipole’s zenith gain,
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the ranges are split, running in the region of 0.04-λ for the lowest
dipole up to about 0.055-λ for the highest.
Over very good and average soil, the reflector height remains
constant, but the separation between the dipole and the reflector
changes with a change in the dipole’s height. The separation
between the dipole and the reflector also changes for each dipole
height over very poor soil, but that change combines with a change
in the best height above ground to produce a more complex picture.
In just the region of soil quality for which a parasitic reflector effects
a worthy improvement, uniformity disappears. In fact, over poorer
soils, one cannot recommend either a single height above ground
or a single spacing between elements that will cover the remaining
variables, such as dipole height. As soils improve, we can
recommend some reasonably good reflector heights above ground,
but not without also considering whether the potential improvement
justifies the installation and maintenance efforts.
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Table 2 provides the data for 40-meter dipoles at the same three
heights (measured in wavelengths. Of course, the physical heights,
as shown in the table, will be only about half the 75-meter values.
Otherwise, the data takes the same steps as for the longer
antenna. The reflector height increments are 0.005-λ between
0.005-λ and 0.06-λ, with the addition of –0.001λ to simulate a
buried reflector and 0.001-λ to simulate one very close to ground
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The data for each entry includes the zenith gain and the broadside
bandwidth. The beamwidth data has an obvious story to tell,
namely, that for practical operating purposes, the beamwidth does
not vary enough to be a concern over any soil quality with any
dipole height. However, for both 75 and 40 meters, the beamwidth
information conveys some subtle pattern changes. Over very good
soil, the beamwidth continuously rises. Over average soil, the
general trend is a rise in beamwidth value as we raise the reflector
height, but we find in some cases an initial drop in value for the
lowest reflector height. Over very poor soil, the beamwidth
decreases from the initial value until we approach or reach the
reflector height for maximum zenith gain, after which point, the
value rises. We might also note that the rate of beamwidth value
change slows or stops just before we arrive at maximum zenith
gain for each soil and dipole height combination.
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Like the 75-meter reflector heights that yield maximum zenith gain,
the 40-meter reflector heights over very good and average soil
show only a small range, regardless of the dipole height. However,
on 40 meters, the ranges are slightly higher: 0.015-λ to 0.02-λ over
very good soil and 0.03-λ to 0.035-λ over average soil. Over very
poor soil, the ranges are also higher on 40 meters than on 75
meters, reaching 0.06-λ for dipole heights from 0.175-λ to 0.2-λ. In
all cases, we find a change in the spacing from the dipole to the
reflector as we change the soil quality.
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The second direction involves our alternative level antenna, the 1-λ
loop. To what degree loops follow or depart from the trends
established by the dipole arrays is a significant inquiry, since we
found a close correlation between the heights of maximum zenith
gain for both dipoles and loops. Because any differences might
impact the investigation of alternative reflector systems, we likely
should turn down the loop road first.
The 1-λ loop inherently has more gain than a ½-λ dipole. Its
advantages for NVIS operation lie both in the gain and the greater
circularity of its upward radiation patterns. As we saw in the study
of the loop alone, the gain advantage of the loop tends to be about
0.6 dB (on average) over the dipole. Adding a reflector to the NVIS
loop is simply a matter of creating a second loop below the first.
Like the 2-element dipole parasitic array, the loop array requires a
larger reflector loop circumference relative to the driven loop
circumference.
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reflector heights change very little with driven loop height, the
separation values vary a lot.
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The gain benefits of a reflector follow the dipole pattern: over very
good soil, added gain is minimal. Even over average soil, the
maximum gain addition is under a half dB. Over very poor soil, the
reflector may add up to 1 dB of gain, depending upon the driven
loop height.
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If you compare Fig. 14 with Fig. 18, you can see that over very
good soil, the gain level at the two lower heights on 40 meters
result in overlapping lines, rather than separate lines. Similarly,
over very poor soil, the 40-meter lines for the two higher levels
overlap, whereas on 75 meters, they are separate. Compare Fig.
16 with Fig. 20.
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its distance from the driven element—in this case, either a dipole or
a 1-λ loop. Although it is possible to elevate a planar reflector closer
to the driven element to optimize performance, we cannot simply
reduce the height of the driven element toward a ground-level
reflector. The far-field gain is a function not only of the area covered
by the reflector, but depends on the region several wavelengths
away from the reflector. As a result, we shall only be able to obtain
benefits that result from a practical ground-level reflector and an
elevated driver.
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Table 5 provides data on the planar reflectors for both dipoles (on
the left) and loops (on the right). However, it also includes data for
isolated NVIS antennas and for antenna-reflector combinations
using the same set of limiting constraints. In all cases, the driven
antenna is 0.175-λ above ground. The table indicates the antenna
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The entries for the full screen planar reflector may seem odd at first
sight. For all preceding arrays, we find that very good soil yields the
highest zenith gain. However, with a full screen, using either a
dipole or a loop, the highest gain occurs over very poor soil. The
difference is not operationally significant within each full screen
group, but the phenomenon is interesting. Only the full screen
provides sufficient coverage to isolate the antenna from the ground
to the degree that very poor soil approaches the quality of free
space. Even the 9-wire screen has ground losses between wires,
losses that one can reduce by increasing the reflector wire diameter
or by increasing the number of wires—or both.
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For all soil qualities, the sketch shows the average optimal height
for an inverted-V with a 30° slope (or a 120° included angle). The
reflector, by virtue of its need for greater length than the driven
element requires a center height of about 0.155-λ, but the slope
angle is greater than 30°. The precise angle is a function of the
wire-end heights, which tend to be between 0.01-λ and 0.015-λ
above ground. With respect to user safety, the reflector ends are
too close to ground, but we shall bypass this legitimate concern in
order to evaluate antenna performance.
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There are means to obtain additional gain from the inverted-V while
preserving the SWR bandwidth available with the V alone. We may
place a ground-level planar reflector below the V using essentially
the same techniques that we employed for the dipole and the loop
antennas. Indeed, as shown in Fig. 28, the 9-wire and full-screen
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reflectors may use the same dimensions as used with the level
antennas. The same application rules also apply. We may improve
the 9-wire reflector performance by adding either thicker wires or
more wires. The full screen may use materials with opening no
larger than 0.05-λ, although common materials will normally have
much smaller openings relative to NVIS operating frequencies.
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For all of the entries, the inverted-V arrays have gain levels about a
full dB below the levels achieved by the level dipole, despite the V’s
greater center height. (Loop arrays, of course, provide an additional
gain increment.) Over very good ground, the gain benefits of any of
the reflector systems are quite marginal, but over very poor soil, the
gain increase can approach 3 dB. The gain of the full screen (using
a model with twice the wire density shown in Fig. 28) over very
poor ground parallels the value increases that we observed with the
level antennas. To approach this level of performance with the 9-
wire screen would require extensive revisions to cover the ground
more thoroughly with conductive wires.
Conclusion
The goal of these notes has been to provide as full and complete
information as possible on reflectors for basic NVIS antennas. The
notes make no recommendations about the selection of any
reflector technique beyond the very general notes concerning the
relative size of the gain benefits over the range of soil types in the
survey. Such comments merely state the obvious. If blessed with
very good soil, the antenna installation needs no supplementation,
since reflectors in general only improve gain to the level of the
antenna alone over very good soil. However, over lesser soils,
including very poor soil, the use of a reflector can be beneficial,
although one must measure the potential level of gain improvement
against a host of other factors. Among these factors are the NVIS
station mission, the difficulty of coverage, the available antenna
site, and the investment of resources required for the improvements
that might come from a reflector.
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T
he preceding Chapters have developed a data compendium
on the performance of basic NVIS antennas, with special
reference to the dipole, the inverted-V, and the 1-λ loop. Our
focus on these antennas has centered on fixed stations with well-
prepared installation sites. Therefore, we sought to identify for each
of the three soil types in our survey the antenna height for peak
zenith gain, along with other trends that are relevant to
performance. One collection worked with isolated or
unsupplemented antenna elements, while the other collection
featured both parasitic and planar reflector systems for the fed
elements.
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At either height, the wire dipole may cover the entire 40-meter band
in terms of the SWR curves referenced to the resonant impedance
over average soil. Fig. 5 provides both curves. An actual
installation might wish to lengthen the listed length values for the
element to center the curves within the band. Note that on 40
meters, the two listed heights call for about a 5” difference in
element length, with further adjustments needed as the soil quality
changes. At 25’, the feedpoint impedance favors a match with 70-Ω
cable, while at 35’, the impedance is a bit higher. In a practical
installation at 35’, the length of coaxial cable usually needed to
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In principle, a NVIS dipole should use the height that yields best
performance. However, as a practical matter, most installations
may be forced to use other reasonable heights based on available
supports and other site factors. The tabular data shows a modest
degradation of performance at the alternative heights, but the
overall level of performance is close enough to optimal that we can
expect good performance from the alternative. The 75-and 40-
meter NVIS dipoles provide a standard against which we can
measure other basic NVIS antennas.
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The 75-meter center height options are 60’ and 45’, while the 40-
meter options are 35’ and 25’. Table 2 provides the modeled data
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for all of these options over the standard three types of ground
quality.
The table shows the total element length, but adds two other
figures for each version of the inverted-V. The end height is the
height of the wire tip (excluding end ropes and insulators) above
ground. The end length is the horizontal distance parallel to the
ground from the center of the antenna to the wire end. Double the
end length to obtain the total horizontal distance needed for an
inverted-V installation. One advantage of the V-configuration for
some sites is the reduced linear space needed for the antenna,
while the need for a single tall center support and two shorter end
supports is often a second attraction.
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On 40 meters, the two alternative center heights are 35’ and 25’.
The lower height proved better for the level dipole, but for the
inverted-V, the higher center support provides superior zenith gain.
As well, the 25’ height for the V results in wire ends only about 8.5’
above ground, which may fall below the safety level for a fixed
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lengthen the listed element length to better center the SWR curve
within the band. The 35’ center height tends to favor 70-Ω
feedlines, while the lower 25’ height yields feedpoint impedance
values closer to 50 Ω.
version at 50’ and at 35’. The 40-meter height options will be 35’
and 25’. Fig. 11 outlines some of the critical aspects of loop
installation, including the need for four tall corner supports.
(Although the number may seem problematical for a single
antenna, it will become less so when we consider multi-band
installations.) We may select either a mid-side feedpoint (used in
the models) or a corner feedpoint. The latter allows feedline support
along the support post with no change in the tabulated data in
Table 3. The only differences are the physical axes for the
broadside and endwise radiation patterns that move from a side-to-
side orientation to a corner-to-corner perspective.
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at its best height. As we raise the loop above its best height, the
pattern becomes more oval.
The 35’ loop, being above optimal height, shows higher feedpoint
impedances that suggest the use of a 93-Ω matching section. At
25’, the impedance values are on the borderline that allows testing
of each matching section impedance value for the widest 50-Ω
SWR curve. The curves in Fig. 15 are relative to the resonant
feedpoint impedance over average ground for each antenna height.
They confirm the ability of the loop easily to cover the entire 40-
meter band.
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Despite the requirement for 4 tall corner supports, the 1-λ loop is a
highly usable antenna. The dimensional values show the
circumference of the wires, with each side having ¼ the value
shown. The loop fits a square location that may not fully support a
dipole’s ½-λ total length. Moreover, the zenith gain level is
somewhat higher for any height above any ground. A corner
feedpoint permits full cable support, reducing strain on the element-
to-cable junction. For some missions, the greater circularity of the
patterns may also be an advantage.
place two independent dipoles, each at its own best height, close to
each other. Fig. 16 outlines two options for us to consider. In each
case, we shall place the 75-meter dipole at 50’ above ground, with
the 40-meter dipoles at 25’.
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examine the upper portion of the table for dipoles at 35’ and at 25’.
We find a disparity of gain at both heights between the values for
75 meters and for 40 meters. In addition, we find that the
interactions between dipoles are minimal in terms of performance,
but they do require adjustments to dipole lengths relative to the
required lengths of independent dipoles at each height.
The lower height is close to ideal for 40 meters, but very low for 75
meters. 35’ is somewhat low for 75-meters, but already high for 40
meter NVIS dipoles. Although 50’ would provide better 75-meter
performance, 40-meter zenith gain would drop, because the
broadside pattern would be split into two lobes with a very
noticeable zenith null between them. Fig. 18 provides broadside
patterns for both bands at both array heights. At the upper height
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Finding the ideal height for crossed inverted-Vs will involve more
than just gain equalization. As shown in Fig. 20, the 40-meter
broadside elevation pattern shows serious lobe splitting and a very
wide broadside beamwidth. We may also examine the dimensions
for the Vs in Table 5 and uncover an additional installation
temptation. At either height, the 30° sloping Vs place the 40-meter
wire ends much higher above ground than required by the 75-meter
V. The temptation would be to use a greater slope angle (that is, a
smaller included angle) for the 40meter V. The smaller angle also
promises to lower the 40-meter impedance to a value that more
closely matches the 75-meter value. However, as we decrease the
included angle of an inverted-V (or any half-wavelength V-element),
the gain decreases along the V-axis. The already low zenith gain of
the 30° V element would drop to even less desirable levels.
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height. For our sample, outlined in Fig. 21, we can set the 40-meter
loop at 25’ above average ground, with the 75-meter loop 10’
higher to obtain matched gain levels. One advantage of the nested
loops is that we may also orient the broadside patterns in the same
direction.
Table 6 provides numerical data for the pair of loops. Not only do
both loops share a nearly common zenith gain value, but as well,
the beamwidth ratio is almost the same on both bands. Despite
nesting, the performance data for the individual loops is nearly the
same as for independent loops, such as those shown in Table 3.
However, the proximity of the loops yields some revision of the loop
dimensions relative to monoband versions. Since the 75-meter loop
is nearly 2-λ in circumference on 40 meters, it shows a low but not
wholly negligible level of activity when we drive the 40-meter loop.
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Those who can manage only two supports may wish to consider a
largely overlooked option for a NVIS antenna: a center-fed doublet.
Fig. 24 shows the outline of one possibility. Although it looks like a
common dipole, it is not. Rather, it will function as a center-fed
element that ranges from about 0.4-λ on 75 meters to about 0.75-λ
on 40-meters. In addition, we may operate the doublet on 60
meters, where it is just over 0.55-λ long. For our sample, we shall
use a height of 35’, which is higher than ideal for a ½-λ 40-meter
dipole, but nearly ideal for the longer length of the doublet.
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and the impedances values are not very far apart in the two tables,
especially considering the application of an ATU to the feed
system. As expected, the key benefit is to the zenith gain over
lesser quality soils. Note that the gain values for 40 meters do not
keep pace with those for the lower bands. The screen is simply
oversized for that band.
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The modeled data appear in Table 9. The zenith gain for the
inverted-V is low by virtue of the V-configuration and the low height.
The dipole model over average ground has more equal gain values,
but the 75-meter performance shows a deficit relative to individual
dipoles over the same ground. The 40-meter gain value for the
portion of the antenna inside the traps is comparable to the value of
the 40-meter dipole at the same height for crossed dipoles using a
common feedpoint.
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values are higher. Prior to building a trap antenna for NVIS work,
one might experiment with trap components, including the trap
resonant frequency, to arrive at a better match for the usual coaxial
cable feedline. The dipole version of the antenna has a total length
similar to the length of the doublet. Both antennas have
complexities, in one case the traps, in the other the need for an
ATU.
Conclusion
For the fixed NVIS station with an important mission, casual design
is not good enough, simply because we can do better. The notes in
this collection provide some background data that I hope will
contribute toward better NVIS antennas.
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I
n the past, most amateur NVIS activity occurred on 75 and 40
meters. Recently, amateurs have begun expanding their
coverage to include 60 meters. That has brought requests and
suggestions for NVIS antennas that cover all three bands—without
resorting to lossy terminated antenna configurations. An added
requirement often cited is the need to switch bands rapidly without
having to readjust an antenna tuner. Although it is possible to set
up a single wire with a parallel feedline to a tuner and by careful
selection of both the antenna height and length to achieve
adequate pattern from 75 through 40 meters, this last requirement
effectively precludes this option without the use of very fast
automatic tuners with memories to eliminate tuner searching for
settings while changing bands. Let’s omit this option from our
exercise.
duty. However, for pure NVIS work, such antennas tend only to
increase atmospheric noise levels while receiving.
Therefore, let’s restrict, for our exercise alone, the maximum height
of our NVIS antennas to 35’. Some of our examples will also use a
25’ height. As the data in Table 1 show, these heights are very low
on 75 meters, but approach optimal NVIS heights on 60 and may
even exceed them on 40 meters. The main reason for using heights
of 35’ and 25’ is that most amateur installations cannot usually
exceed these heights without considerable difficulties.
With very low antenna heights come a few very important cautions.
The antennas in these notes will use either AWG #12 (0.0808”
diameter) or AWG #14 (0.0641” diameter) copper wire. Dimensions
will be in feet but may show up to 2 decimal places. These
decimals result from the antenna modeling software used to
generate the models. In fact, all dimensions are only starting points.
Any replication of the antenna designs shown will require
considerable field adjustment and dimensions may depart by a
noticeable amount from the listed dimensions.
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There are two major reasons for the potential variance between the
model and reality. Antennas at very low heights vary their
impedance values and their resonant lengths with only small
changes in height. In addition, at very low heights, the resonant
length and impedance of a basic antenna types vary with the
quality of ground beneath the antenna. All of the models use
average ground with a conductivity of 0.005 S/m and a permittivity
(relative dielectric constant) of 13. Your ground quality may differ
considerably from these numbers, ranging very likely from very
good (0.0303 S/m, 20) down to very poor (0.001 S/m, 5). Ideally,
you should plan your antenna by remodeling the samples in these
notes for the most precise height values that you can obtain and for
the best estimate of ground quality. Even so, expect significant field
adjustment when you assemble the antenna.
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From the two elevation patterns, you may infer the general
departure from the ideal circular pattern. The inference may prove
useful in orienting an actual antenna to provide a desired degree of
coverage. As you continue to raise the height of a NVIS antenna,
the broadside pattern tends to increase its beamwidth until the top
flattens and the radiation pattern evolves into a pair of lobes, one in
each broadside direction.
The reason that we may usefully spend some time looking at basic
antennas for 3-band operation has to do with the properties of NVIS
propagation. At night, the ionosphere lacks the absorbing D-layer
and so 75 meters (and 160 meters) become very useful for
refracting (reflecting) radiation from the nighttime F-layer, which
may not be strong enough for usable return signals on 40 meters.
In the daytime, the F-layer strengthens, but the D-layer reforms,
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Fig. 2 shows the dimensions for a trap inverted V for 75, 60, and 40
meters using AWG #12 wire, which is normally strong enough to
support the weight of the traps. The dimensions are suited to a 35’
center height above average ground with a 30° element slope (or a
120° included angle below the center point). The dimensions place
the wire ends 9.25’ above ground. The design aims for feedpoint
impedance values that are compatible with either 50-Ω or 75-Ω
coaxial cable. (I might note in passing that most cables, such as
RG-59, have 70-Ω characteristic impedance values, but tradition
allows a collective reference to 75-Ω cable.) The overall leg length
for 75-meter operation is less than 48’, although a simple inverted V
for 75 meters might use leg lengths of about 60.5’. Hence, the trap
3-band V has the smallest footprint of all of our test designs. It
requires less than 90’ of horizontal length and only the wire or cable
thickness for width. As well, it normally requires only one 35’
support pole, while 10’ poles can support the wire ends. Of course,
the antenna design allows instant band changing with no required
action upon the antenna itself once successfully installed. These
are perhaps the major advantages of using a 3-band trap inverted
V.
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The design does not use a lower wire as what some call a
“counterpoise” (in a total misuse of that term). Extensive modeling
has shown that a single wire near ground below a NVIS element
does not significantly change the antenna gain. The ground itself is
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the primary reflective surface and it extends far beyond the limits of
a low reflector wire. A way to improve performance is to lay out a
series of 7-9 wires or a full (chicken-wire) screen that exceeds the
active element dimensions by 0.4 λ to 0.5 λ in every dimensions.
Then the local ground acts like a planar reflector, but only to a
certain point. A full ground screen improves performance only to
the level of very good ground. For a basic installation, the antenna
element itself is all that one needs unless one creates ground
screening or an elevated tuned reflector.
The SWR curves in Fig. 4 show the relative sizes of the operating
windows for each band. Since the antenna would require field
adjustment as a matter of course, you can adjust the wire lengths to
move the windows anywhere within the bands. Compared to other
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For those unfamiliar with the action of traps, Fig. 5 presents a set of
current magnitude distribution curves along the inverted V on each
of the three bands. The center gap is a function of the sloping
element halves, since the magnitude is measured from the wire
itself. On the two lower bands, note the increase in the slope of the
curve as it passes a trap, which acts like a non-radiating load
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each wire end. Although this system is probably more complex than
most amateurs wish, let’s examine it to see what level of
performance we can obtain. We shall place the system at 35’ above
average ground and then drop it to 25’ above ground. If you refer to
Table 1, you can gauge the height of each dipole as a fraction of a
wavelength and estimate the probable performance relative to
performance at an optimal height (0.15-λ to 0.22-λ above ground).
Table 3 provides the modeled dimensions and performance data
for both heights.
The broadside and endwise beamwidth and the gain values in the
table are worth noting. At a height of 25’, only the 40-meter dipole is
at optimal height for maximum gain straight up. The other dipoles
fall increasing below the optimal height and therefore show lower
gain, largely due to ground absorption. All patterns follow the model
in Fig. 1 with wider broadside beamwidth values than endwise
values. When we move the antenna upward by 10’, the 75-and 60-
meter dipoles are closer to optimal NVIS height and show better
gain than at 25’. However, the 40meter maximum gain value
decreases relative to the value at 25’. As well, the beamwidth
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The V system uses a standard 30° angle for the wire slope. One
result is a variation in the wire-end heights, which range from 5.8’
on 75 meters up to 19.15’ on 40 meters. A practical installation
might wish to select a common height for all wire ends. For
example, 10’ end supports would place all wires above the potential
for accidental contact but with reduced gain on the higher bands.
However, to obtain a 30° slope angle, the center height needs to be
about 35’ to prevent the 75-meter V from touching ground.
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values to those for the level dipoles at 25’ and 35’. Only the 40-
meter V dipole, with its ends at over 19’ above ground is clearly
competitive with the level dipole versions. As the V ends more
closely approach ground level, the gain decreases. The 75-meter
maximum gain is nearly 3 dB lower than the gain of the dipole at
35’. Although the inverted V version of the cross dipole array is
mechanically simpler than the level dipole version, there is a gain
price for the convenience. (As a side note, compare the crossed V
array gain values to those of the trap dipole in Table 2 to obtain a
rough estimate for the further losses due to trap construction.)
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slightly lower than its center height, so the pattern is less distinctly
split into separate broadside lobes.
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Although the basic sketch shows the loops on a level plane, the
model for them places the 75-meter and the 60-meter loops at 35’,
heights closer to optimum for those frequencies. (In fact, a height of
45’ to 50’ would be best for the 75-meter loop, but we started this
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The 75-meter loop is below its optimum height and shows a slightly
narrower broadside beamwidth than the broadside patterns for 60
and 40 meters, both of which are at close to optimal heights. Loops
tend to produce more circular patterns than dipoles, as suggested
by the endwise patterns, which vary from the broadside
beamwidths by only about 20°. As well, loops have slightly higher
gain values than dipoles. For the nest shown, the gain varies
between 6.4 and 6.8 dBi.
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Conclusion
Our goal has been to explore some basic 3-band antenna systems
for NVIS operation on 75, 60, and 40 meters. We have tried to
portray reasonably the advantages and disadvantages of each
system. As well, we have used the occasion to address some basic
issues in NVIS antennas, such as the ineffectiveness of so-called
single-wire reflectors or “counterpoises,” and the effects of using
the inverted V configuration in contrast to level dipoles. The trap
inverted V uses the least real estate as measured by its area, but
has overall the lowest performance level. Crossed dipoles improve
performance significantly but require an extensive structure. Setting
the dipoles into a V-configuration eases the support requirements
but at the cost of severe performance reductions, especially on 75
meters. The nested 1-λ loops require 4 full-height supports and
separate, switched feedlines, but provide the highest level of
performance of the group of candidates.
These notes have not covered all possibilities. For example, we did
not discuss using a single antenna across the entire spectrum by
employing either a lossy terminating resistor (or set of resistors) or
by using high-speed matching systems. Our aim was to stick to
basic antennas and basic installation techniques. These notes do
not form in any way a complete menu of tri-band NVIS coverage.
Indeed, they are at most appetizers, food for thought.
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N
ot all NVIS missions are the same, and so not all antenna
requirements are the same. In this set of notes, we shall
examine a few of the special requirements that some
missions might impose upon antennas and look at a few samples
ways to fulfill the needs. Not all of the antennas that we shall
explore fall in the category of basic NVIS antennas, but they are all
buildable by experienced radio amateurs.
A perfectly vertical pattern is not always the best fit for a station’s
mission. In the third and final part of our work on special purposes
NVIS antennas, we shall examine some ways in which we might
reliably tip the pattern of a NVIS antenna in a desired direction
while maintaining adequate zenith gain. In fact, we shall begin with
a tempting proposal that simply does not work. Then we shall
examine a few workable ideas, exploring along the way the
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An AWG #14 copper wire rectangle for 75 meters will require side
wires about 0.358-λ long, with end wires about 0.157-λ long. For
the numerical data in Table 1, I first resonated the loop at a height
of 0.175-λ above average ground and then sought the height of
maximum zenith gain over our three standard soil varieties: very
good, average, and very poor. (See the first set of notes for soil
quality specifications in terms of conductivity and relative
permittivity.) For each soil quality, I recorded the zenith gain,
beamwidths, and feedpoint impedance between 0.145-λ and 0.235-
λ above ground in 0.01-λ increments. The table indicates by italics
the heights of maximum zenith gain for each soil quality. For this
class of antennas, there is no difference between zenith gain and
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Fig. 3 provides a graphic view of the gain curves for the three soil
qualities. They are quite shallow and selecting a mounting height
that differs a bit from the optimum height would yield undetectable
differences in performance. In fact, the optimum heights for
maximum zenith gain for the rectangle are uniformly slightly higher
(by about 0.01-λ) than those for the square loop. We may note in
passing that the fed wire and the opposite wire are significantly
farther apart in the rectangle than the corresponding wires are in
the square loop. Although not very significant relative to building a
loop, this fact will take on more importance when we examine other
types of antennas in these notes. We should remember that we
may analyze the square loop and the rectangle as two dipoles in
phase, bent so that the ends join at the center of the side wires.
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In general, the heights required for maximum zenith gain are about
one step higher on 40 than on 75. In addition, they are equivalently
higher than for the square loop on 40 meters. Fig. 5 provides a
graphic view of the gain curves for each soil type in the table. Like
the curves for 75 meters, the 40-meter gain graphs show very slow
changes in the zenith gain in the general height region of maximum
gain, a fact that allows the user to vary the physical height of the
antenna with no perceptible difference in operational performance.
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The tables have shown zenith gain values that may seem high
compared to those we developed in the second set of these notes
for the dipole and the square loop. To confirm this impression,
Table 3 presents maximum zenith gain data for each type of
antenna over each type of soil, along with the height above ground
at which the maximum zenith gain occurs. The heights of maximum
gain for both the dipole and the square loop are almost identical,
but the rectangle requires about 0.01-λ greater height to reach
maximum gain. As noted earlier, this is a fact worth remembering
for the moment.
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are 0.05-λ per side to simulate better the sorts of screening that
might actually find use at a site. For uniformity over the three soil
types, the antenna is fixed at 0.175-λ above ground and uses the
dimensions set for resonance without a screen. Table 4 presents
the results of the screen test.
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One of the earliest antennas in this group has carried the label
“Shirley” array. As shown in Fig. 7, it is a form of lazy-H that uses
relatively short (1/2-λ) elements with a wide spacing (0.65λ)
between them. The lines joining the elements are transmission line
sections. To achieve in-phase feeding of the elements, we use
equal length sections to a central feedpoint.
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With a ground screen, the array provides only a very small gain
improvement over very good ground, but about 2-dB of
improvement over very poor soil. The reported gain values are
insignificantly different as we change soil types once we add the
screen. Indeed, the uniformity of operating characteristics tends to
apply to all of the antenna parameters.
The second of our older antenna systems bears the label “Jamaica”
array. In fact, as shown by the outline sketch in Fig. 10, the array is
nothing more or less than a traditional lazy-H. The elements are 1 λ
long, which presents to the individual phase lines a very high
impedance value. Normally, a lazy-H builder uses equal lengths of
parallel transmission line to a central feedpoint. Again, the precise
impedance at the feedpoint is the parallel combination of individual
impedance values, as transformed by the lines. The transformation
will depend upon the characteristic impedance, velocity factor, and
length of the lines employed. In many cases, the net feedpoint
impedance will consist of a relatively low resistive component and a
high reactance. As a result, matching at the feedpoint generally
results in lower losses than using a long run of parallel transmission
line.
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The patterns not only show secondary lobes along both axes, but
as the 3-dimensional view of the pattern reveals, the secondary
lobes are separate. An elevation pattern along an axis at 45° to the
broadside and endwise directions would show virtually no
secondary lobe structure. The strongest secondary lobe is about 12
dB lower in strength than the main lobe and would normally not
constitute a problem for NVIS operation. However, strong
atmospheric noise at medium elevation angles in certain (mostly
endwise) directions may raise the overall background noise level.
Perhaps a more interesting problem is the fact that, at the endwise
half-power beamwidth angle, the communications radius is less
than about 150 miles, rather than the 200-300 mile range we
expect of more basic antennas. (Broadside, the radius is over 200
miles.) The situation reveals that, so long as NVIS gain comes at
the expense of radiation pattern beamwidth, there are limits to the
gain that we should expect from NVIS arrays.
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As shown in Fig. 15, we may place a ground level screen below the
extended lazy-H. The increased element length and spacing
distance of the array requires a screen that is 2 λ endwise and 1.5 λ
broadside. As in all of the screen tests in this section, the antenna
is 0.2-λ above ground. Table 10 provides the test results.
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Table 11 provides data for all three bands over the surveyed soil
types. As the best compromise among the bands, the antenna is
set 40’ above ground, which is somewhat high for 40 meters,
somewhat low for 75 meters, and nearly optimal for 60 meters.
However, element and spacing reductions yield lower gain on the
60-meter band than on the 40-meter band.
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Thus far, we have presumed that the zenith angle is best for
virtually all missions. However, some stations have indicated a
need for tilted NVIS patterns. The primary examples both come
from near-shore locations. In one case, the goal was for maximum
inland coverage; in the other instance, the aim was for over-water
coverage. The design question that emerges is whether we can not
only tilt the NVIS pattern, but also maintain gain directly upward at
least at dipole levels.
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The maximum gain varies by only a small amount among the three
beams for any given frequency and soil quality. Where we find
more important differences is in the zenith gain columns, with the
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In fact, all three candidate beams (and many other basic arrays that
we might select for the task) tilt the pattern in the defined forward
direction. The driver-director Yagi and the Moxon rectangle provide
better reduction of signal strength to the rearward areas. The
numbers and the pattern shapes that we have so far observed do
not quite complete the information that we need in order to make a
decision.
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Before we close the book on the Moxon rectangle, let’s add one
more test by placing a 1-λby-1-λ near-ground screen below it,
similar to tests that we have performed with other antennas in this
overall collection of notes. Since the dimensions of the Moxon
rectangle are modest, when measured in terms of wavelengths, the
smaller screen—outlined in Fig. 24—will suffice.
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The results of our test appear in Table 15, which may hold a
surprise for the unwary. In all other tests, we found that the gain
over very poor soil exceeded the gain over other soils with the
screen in place. While this trend holds true for the zenith gain
values, it does not hold true for the maximum gain values.
Maximum gain at the take-off angle involves ground reflection not
only in the immediate vicinity of the antenna, but also well beyond
the screen limits in the forward direction. As a result, some major
components of the reflected rays that combine with the incident
rays are reflected from bare soil and hence show heavier losses.
The amounts are not operationally significant, but are just enough
to show up in the lack of parallelism between the progressions of
maximum gain and zenith gain values.
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Conclusion
These notes have not covered all possible special needs. One fairly
obvious omission is the need for rapid frequency changes, such as
those demanded by automatic link establishment (ALE) techniques.
Antennas to meet these needs, such as terminated antennas with
relatively constant feedpoint impedance values over a very large
frequency range, are the subject extensive notes elsewhere at this
site. The gain deficits that are inherent in these antennas have
spurred investigation in two directions. One is the development of
an antenna without the loss of gain but with the uniform feedpoint
impedance. The other is the employment of high-speed antenna
tuner switching to allow the use of common antennas with higher
gain to do the job. In addition, for non-military, non-governmental
applications, such as the wide range of type of emergency
communications, the situation has raised the question of whether
we need frequency change times in the microsecond range or
whether we might ably use change times in milliseconds, of which
many ATUs are capable.
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T
o set a contrast with the vertical-plane (VP) loops (covered in
another note in this series on vertical-plane deltas), I made a
couple of models of 80- meter 4-sided horizontal-plane (HP)
loops, each 70' per side to bring them close to resonance in the 80-
meter band. One I fed at a corner; the other a fed mid-side. The
loops are at 35' up over medium earth and are #12 copper wire.
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Both the corner-fed and the side-fed antennas, as the charts will
show, represent easy work on an antenna tuner, with very
reasonable values of R and X. Indeed, a 300- ohm line will likely
show the smallest excursions of R and X along the line length,
although 450-ohm line is perfectly good as well. From the values in
the chart, line length should not be critical.
In the charts below, all maximum gain figures use the TO angle
(elevation angle of maximum radiation) except for 80 meters,
whether the gain is at a 45-degree TO angle.
1 wl loop (70'/side), corner-fed: #12 copper 35' up over medium earth:
Freq. TO angle Max Gain Feed Z Pattern notes
MHz degrees dBi R+/-jX
3.58 90 5.16@45 67 +j 4 oval thru corners
7.1 48 5.69 84 -j150 oval across corners
10.1 41 9.32 370 -j575 narrow oval thru corners
14.1 27 10.51 305 -j105 clover leaves thru corners
18.1 20 13.75 350 +j240 EDZ-like thru corners
21.1 17 13.63 245 -j105 clover
24.95 14 14.09 320 +j110 thru crnrs w/side lobes
28.1 12 12.92 225 -j145 12 lobes
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The side-fed shows slightly less max gain on the upper bands, but
has more stronger lobes other than the corner-fed version. If the
pattern notes can be deciphered, you can choose whichever suits
your operating desires most.
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The 10.1 MHz patterns show the most unique differences, with the
corner-fed model having a beam-like pattern, while the side-fed
model pattern is somewhat non-descript but more omni-directional.
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At 21.1 MHz, the side-fed model shows much broader lobes, while
the energy from the corner-fed model is concentrated in 4 fairly
narrow lobes.
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By the 10-meter band, there is little to choose from between the two
antennas.
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For all-band use, the HP loop seems to offer more than the VP
loop. The HP loop elevation angles are close to those of a single
wire doublet, which places them lower and stronger than those for a
VP loop. In general, with either mode of feeding, expect strongest
results in the quadrants across the way from the feedpoint.
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T
he horizontally oriented 1-wavelength square loop is a fairly
standard low-HF amateur antenna. It lends itself to use with
parallel feedline for multi-band application. However, a 1-
wavelength loop tends to radiate broadside to the loop. Therefore,
the antenna tends to provide better performance on bands above
the lowest.
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of 127.6'. This dimension set is actually smaller than for the square
loop. However, as shown in the sketch, each wire is stretched
inward toward the center. We cannot make the wire touch at the
center, but we can come in rather close. The most radically inset
case that I have so far explored positions the apex of each angle
formed from the side wires at 1.75' from the antenna center. This
yields a distance of about 3.5' between opposing points. The
resulting wire length for each side of each point in the star is about
21.35'. The total wire circumference thus becomes about 170.8' or
close to 1.25 wavelengths.
Antenna Height 50'. Antenna Wire AWG #12 copper. "Insets" refers to the
distance of the limit of the star side inset point from the exact center
of the array.
Several aspects of the tabular data are significant. First, the 40-
meter gain of the two versions of the loop is virtually the same.
However, the elevation angle of maximum radiation is considerably
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center shown may be doubled to see how far apart we may place
the inner points of the star. There is considerable room for variation
before we lose our advantage over the square loop in terms of TO
angle. However, note that the 3.0' inset has bumped the TO angle
upward one notch. As we further move the inner start points away
from center, the antenna slowly returns to the characteristics of a
simple square loop.
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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
40-Meter Square Loop Performance
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For the entries called "Broad beam," the direction of maximum gain
is toward the side of the star containing the feedpoints. If we
overlay the outline of the antenna on top of the azimuth patterns in
Fig. 4, the feedpoint will be above the plot center line across the
page.
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There are three bands on which the reactance rises above 1000
Ohms. However, only on 30 meters are the values for both
resistance and reactance so high as to create a very distinct
problem for matching the feedline termination to the transceiver 50-
Ohm system.
Why?
The distinctness of the square loop and the star loop patterns
should arouse some curiosity as to the reason for the differences.
Fig 5 provides a partial answer.
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Otherwise, the gain and pattern shape of the 2 versions of the loop
are the same.
The 15-meter case is especially interesting. For the star loop, the
current magnitude peaks and valleys appear in close proximity
along the outward star-point wires. Hence, the currents (or, more
properly, the fields that result) tend to simply add to or subtract from
each other-- with due place given to the phase of each current
magnitude sampled. However, in the square loop, we have current
magnitude peaks more linearly separated from each other, with
distinct peaks at the four corners of the array. The result is the 6-
lobes pattern, with the largest lobes at a considerable angle from
the axis of the antenna.
These brief notes suggest that for some users of square loops,
modification to a star design may be useful. The array dimensions
for 40 meters will easily scale to 80 and 160 meters, although most
users will have difficulty in scaling the height as well as the wire
length. Since we are only approximating resonance on the lowest
band of use and presuming parallel feedline to an antenna tuner,
fussiness with dimensions seems out of place. Since the wire of the
antenna has a small diameter relative to a wave length, any 50-
Ohm resonance on the lowest band of use is likely to be a very
narrow-band phenomenon.
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L
arge wire antennas are deservedly popular among QRP
operators who have room for them. They are cheap and
effective: the two favorite words among hams.
Among the more usable of the large wire antennas is the loop that
is at least 1 wl long at the lowest frequency of operation. However,
large loops belong to three different families, each with distinct
characteristics.
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For the ham with more area than height in his yard or field, a more
frequent selection is the HOHPL: the horizontally oriented,
horizontally polarized large wire loop antenna. The standard
installation is to place the loop as high as one can, with only the
placement of supports and the overall yard size as restrictions on
the loop length. Loops up to several wavelengths long around their
perimeter are in use on 80 meters--and on all of the bands above.
(We should note in passing that there is no known HOVPL, that is,
a horizontally oriented, vertically polarized large loop antenna.)
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Copperweld is a good material for a long wire loop and may call for
fewer supports than soft-drawn copper wire. Although heavier than
pure copper, quality copperweld wire has many times the strength.
However, another reality of HOHPL construction is that hams tend
to use whatever bargain wire they can find at hamfests, close-outs,
and other inexpensive sources. If you choose the economic route,
be prepared to splice breaks during the life of the antenna.
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L = wire length = 300 / Fl (meters) = 984 / Fl (feet) Fl = lowest frequency used in MHz
L (1.8 MHz) = 167 m = 547' L (3.5 MHz) = 86 m = 281'
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You may locate the feedpoint of a HOHPL at any point along its
length. Mechanically, this usually means intersecting the antenna at
the position that allows the straightest line from the antenna to the
shack entry point. For some installations, the feedpoint may be at a
corner (or junction of sides); for others, the feedpoint may be
centered on a side--or even off- center on a side.
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At this point I shall make a brief pitch for every serious antenna buff
to acquire at least one of the antenna modeling programs. There is
no reason for us to simply accept what a roughly constructed
antenna might give us. We can plan and tame the beast-- whether
by relocating wires or relocating the feedpoint--to give us the best
compromise of lobes going just where we want them.
Like all of the questions surrounding large loops, this question has
two dimensions: the mechanical and the electrical. Therefore, the
simple answer ("As high as possible") does not tell us everything
we need to know or think about in constructing an antenna that
consists of hundreds of feet of wire and a system of at least 3 and
up to 8 support structures.
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only when lowering the antenna and store it out of the weather. I
clip the upper rope to a hook instead of a cleat. When I need to
lower the antenna, I add the extra section, which is long enough to
reach but not pass through the pulley.
A slip ring can be made from almost any plastic, although I tend to
prefer Schedule 40 PVC Tee fittings for their durability. Their
smooth interiors also tend to minimize wire kinking and rubbing,
thus prolonging the life of the antenna. I do not offer these
mechanical notes as a final and best answer to every situation.
Instead, I hope that they get you to think about the mechanical
details of your antenna as being just as important to its successful
performance as the electrical details.
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80 Meters
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All of the loops in this long sequence of azimuth patterns have been
modeled so that the feedpoint is to the far right, whether that point
is in the middle of a side or the point where the wire takes a new
direction. The orientation of the loop is shown only for the 80-meter
azimuth patterns. However, the loop and feedpoint positions do not
change as the modeling runs increase in frequency on succeeding
pages. You can draw your own North line on each pattern.
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For all of the loops shown here, the 3.5 MHz azimuth patterns have
been taken at an arbitrary 45° elevation angle. The actual elevation
angle of maximum radiation on 80 meters is 90° or straight up for
these loops, which are 1þ long. If you compare these patterns with
Fig. 6, you will see that there is very little low elevation angle
radiation on 80 meters, since the basic radiation pattern is
broadside to a 1 wl loop.
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40 Meters
Both the loop shape and the feed position begin to make
themselves evident on the 40-meter azimuth patterns. Elevation
angles of maximum radiation run from 37° to 43° for these 1 wl
loops at 7 MHz, which allows direct comparisons among the
azimuth patterns. Beginning with the square loops, we can examine
them a pair at a time.
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The square loops show a very distinct difference in shape and gain
that depends upon the feed point. The side-fed model shows
stronger lobes (by almost 0.8 dB) and deeper nulls. In contrast, the
corner-fed model is a round-cornered diamond, with a bit less gain
in the direction of the feedpoint. Moreover, the points of maximum
gain for the corner-fed model are to the sides; that is, at right
angles to the axis passing through the antenna feedpoint and the
point opposite it on the antenna loop.
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30 Meters
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When fed at the corner, the 30-meter square pattern becomes very
bi-directional, with about a 2 dB front-to-back ratio and about 8 dB
or more front-to-side ratio. The distance from the feedpoint to the
opposite peak is about 3/8 wl. In contrast, the side-fed square
feedpoint is only about 1/4 wl from the opposite point across the
square. Radiation remains strongest off the corner peaks, and the
gain along the feedpoint axis is nearly 7 dB down from the forward
gain of the corner-fed model.
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Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 606
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 607
20 Meters
On 20 meters, the elevation angle for the loop, whatever its shape
or feedpoint position, has decreased to about 20°. This angle (a
product of the 50' height for all of the models) places the antenna
radiation into the DX range, although signals would be stronger with
the antenna even higher. On 20 meters, the antenna planner is
faced with further decisions.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 608
The square loop shows major lobes near or above 10 dBi off each
of the four corners. The lobes of the side-fed model are broader,
which would lessen the problem of orienting the antenna toward
desired areas of the world. In contrast, the narrower but stronger
lobes of the corner-fed square would provide a gain advantage,
especially in three of the four directions that the antenna favors.
The cost of the added gain is a collection of very wide and deep
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 609
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 610
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 611
17 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 612
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 613
feedpoint. The side-fed square also shows its maximum gain off the
corners. However, since the feedpoint is between corners, the gain
is more evenly distributed among all four corners. Hence, the
apparent major difference in the operation of the loops turns out to
be smaller than at first sight, but very significant for planning.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 614
The greater "side" gain results in a lower gain along the major axis
of the antenna, compared to the square. However, the "side" gain is
not sufficient to qualify this arrangement as having good omni-
directional potential.
The pattern for the side-fed octagon may seem initially mysterious.
Twisting the antenna and moving the feedpoint by only 22.5° alters
the axis of highest gain by 90°. Part of the mystery begins to clear
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 615
15 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 616
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 617
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 618
Like the 17-meter model, the 15-meter models of the octagon show
far greater similarity than do the square models. The corner-fed
version retains a bit of the 4-lobe dominance found in its square
counterpart, but the minor lobes have grown into major ones, giving
the antenna better potential for omni-directional contacts. However,
the side-fed octagon has the most even pattern of all, with only a
small tilt of the pattern away from the feedpoint.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 619
12 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 620
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 621
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 622
The 14 lobes of the 12-meter octagons are clear and distinct in both
the corner and side fed versions of the antenna. In the octagons,
the lobes are functions of the feedpoint in terms of direction.
However, the difference between the two feed positions shows up
in the minor differences in the relative strengths of the individual
lobes, except for the one directly opposite the feedpoint.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 623
10 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 624
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 625
The other possibility is that lobes cancel each other due to the
presence of equal but opposite radiation from symmetrical points
across a loop. In the corner-fed model, notice the wide and very
deep nulls at the 45° angles, and in the side-fed model, notice
similar nulls at the 90° points. Both sets of nulls correspond to the
middle points along the sides of the squares. In effect, the lobes for
these positions have cancelled each other out across the antenna
loop.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 626
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 627
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 628
80 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 629
on 80 meters. The additional low angle gain holds the promise (but
not the guarantee) of more regular longer distance contacts on 80
meters. Although the radiation pattern is fairly even all the way
round the loop, it is slightly stronger at 90° to the feedpoint axis.
There is virtually no difference between the patterns for the version
using a corner feedpoint or for the one using a side feedpoint.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 630
40 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 631
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 632
30 Meters
The patterns for the 160-meter hexagon at 10.1 MHz are roughly
bi-directional along the axis from the feedpoint to the opposite
position on the loop. However, the side-fed version achieves an
almost rectangular pattern, which is somewhat of an oddity.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 633
Of equal significance with the pattern shape are the high values of
resistance and reactance at the feedpoint of either version of the
160-meter hex. The 80-meter loop showed only a few values of
reactance above 500 Ohms, and no resistance values reached that
level. In contrast, the 160-meter loop will show values in excess of
that level for many bands. The length of the feedline used may
require careful selection with the larger loop to ensure that the
values presented to the antenna tuner are within the range of
available adjustment. Some feedline length-switching may be
required as one moves from one band to another.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 634
20 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 635
Of interest is the fact that maximum gain values fall only in the
middle of the span of those exhibited by the 80-meter loop when
run at 14 MHz. On this band--and on others as well, the antenna
offers little to justify the added complexity of running a wire twice as
long as the 80-meter loop. One might well argue for some
installations that the benefits derived on 80 meters from the larger
loop are offset by the disadvantages on some of the higher bands.
Indeed, the shorter loop and a separate 80-meter antenna might be
easier to use.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 636
17 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 637
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 638
15 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 639
wind may lessen the utility of following out each pencil-thin lobe of
the azimuth pattern.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 640
12 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 641
to 15 dBi. Rather, the average gain over the 360° horizon is more
like 5 to 8 dBi. These are gain values more akin to a multiband
quarter-wavelength vertical with a ground plane mounted on a roof
top than they are to typical gain antennas.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 642
10 Meters
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 643
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 644
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 645
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 646
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 647
Notes:
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 648
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 649
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 650
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 651
The 10-meter patterns, while a bit confusing at first sight, also show
that the HOHPL has somewhat fewer nulls of great depth than the
doublet. Moreover, especially in the direction away from the
feedpoint, the HOHPL lobes are stronger (by about 1.5 dB) and
more even in gain. In contrast, the doublet is beginning to show
greater strength in lobes that are further from the broadside
direction and more towards the antenna ends.
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 652
Conclusion
Chapter 72
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 653
I
n the previous Chapter 72, I provided some extensive notes on
horizontally oriented, horizontally polarized wire loop antennas
(HOHPLs). In those notes, the most common practice with
horizontal loops was using a 1-wavelength circumference at the
lowest operating frequency. Since writing that Chapter, I have
changed the recommendation that I usually make, depending on
the space available to the loop builder.
• How Big?
• How High?
• What Shape?
Since we shall defer the question of shape until last, we shall need
a paradigm model with which to begin. Let's use a nearly perfectly
circular loop as our starting point, as outlined in Fig. 1. The loop
uses 40 wires to form the circle, so the approximation is quite good.
For our first 2 questions, the feedpoint will be on the right, in the +X
direction. (We shall alter that for our last question for reasons that
will become apparent when we arrive at questions of shape.) Note
the orientation of the X, Y, and Z axes in the outline drawing. These
axes lines will be important to orienting ourselves to some of the
patterns in upcoming figures.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 654
How Big?
To see how big to make our loop at the lowest operating frequency,
let's put the loop into free-space and examine some 3-dimensional
radiation patterns. These patterns will tell us something about why I
have changed my recommended length for a horizontal loop. The
following table provides the key dimensions of the loops whose
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 656
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 657
The 3-D patterns may seem a bit confusing, but let's align
ourselves with Fig. 1 and its axes lines. The X-axis and the Y-axis
indicate horizontal directions relative to the orientation of the loop,
presumed to be horizontal, even if we are working in free space
with no real "ups" and "downs." The Z-axis is the vertical direction
at right angles to the plane formed by the loop.
Since each 3-D pattern has about the same total volume, relative to
the axis lines, we can see a few trends. First, the 1/2-wavelength
loop forms an oval with slightly stronger radiation in the X direction
than in the Z-direction. The next two loops (1.0-wavelength and 1.5-
wavelength) have stronger radiation along the Z-axis than along
either the X- or Y-axes. Not until we reach a circumference of 2
wavelengths does radiation strength occur predominantly in the X-Y
plane. Another way of expressing this is to say that when a loop
reaches a circumference of 2 wavelengths, it radiates more strongly
off the loop edge than it does broadside to the loop.
The longer loops also show stronger radiation in the X-Y plane than
in the +/-Z direction. However, their patterns are so convoluted that
it is almost impossible to see exactly where the radiation is going.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 658
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 659
The primary feature to note is that for loops with a 1.0- or 1.5-
wavelength circumference, the upper elevation lobes are stronger
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 660
that the lower lobe. Given the high elevation angle (about 35
degrees) of the upper lobe, the lower lobe is obviously that one that
we rely upon for most communication (NVIS excepted, of course).
When we reach a circumference of about 2 wavelengths, the lower
lobe begins to dominate once more. Hence, for skip
communications, the smallest advisable circumference for a
horizontal loop is about 2 wavelengths at the lowest operating
frequency. Smaller loops will work, but at reduced signal strengths.
The second notable feature is the fact that horizontal loops above a
helf-wavelength over ground answer to the standard lobe
development angles that apply to virtually all horizontal antennas
and arrays. All of the lower lobes, regardless of loop length, have a
14-degree elevation angle. The length of a loop does not change
the elevation angle.
For a given power from the transmitter, all of the loops radiate the
same power over the hemisphere above ground. Hence, they differ
only in the maximum gain created by the formation of lobes and
nulls in the pattern (both horizontal and vertical). The following table
summarizes the gain of the strongest lower lobe and gives an
indication of the impedance at the feedpoint. That impedance may
vary considerably with variations in the actual wire length used to
make a loop.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 661
You may relate the improving signal strength maximum values that
accompany longer loops with the width of the lobes for those larger
loops in Fig. 3. Hence, as we make a loop longer, the beamwidth of
the individual lobes grows narrower. As we increase the number of
lobes, we also increase the number of nulls, where signal strength
decreases to a level that may prevent communications.
Finally, for a circular loop (but not necessarily for other shapes), the
number of lobes follows a regular pattern. The number of lobes is
twice the loop circumference in wavelengths. Hence, a 4-
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 662
Fig. 4 shows the dipole, its 3-D free-space pattern, and its elevation
and azimuth patterns at the specified height. The dipole has as
many lobes as a 1-wavelength circular loop, but they are stronger
at the prime 14-degree elevation angle.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 663
How High?
Those who do not seem to have much luck with loops--even when
at least 2 wavelengths long--very often have neglected the role of
height in the performance of any horizontally polarized antenna.
Most of these antennas are aimed at improving performance on the
lower HF bands. However, the average height (from my e-mail
reports) seems to be between 35' and 50' above ground. This
height range covers about 0.06 to 0.11 wavelength on 160 and 0.12
to 0.18 wavelength on 80 meters (low end figures).
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 664
For contrast, let's also look at the numbers for a dipole at the same
height. As always, we shall list the maximum gain of the strongest
lobe or lobes. More important than gain will be the TO angle, that
is, the elevation angle of maximum radiation. The following table
summarizes the loop and dipole results. Since the data should be
applicable to any lowest frequency of use, the heights are functions
of a wavelength.
Comparative Performance of a Circular 2-wavelength Loop and a Dipole at
Various Heights
Circular Loop Dipole
Height Max. Gain TO Angle Max. Gain TO Angle
wavelengths dBi degrees dBi degrees
2.0 7.36 7 8.05 7
1.0 7.27 14 7.98 14
0.75 7.75 19 7.57 19
0.5 7.43 29 7.91 28
0.25 5.94 47 6.33 60
0.15 4.76 52 6.59 90
Chapter 73
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Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 666
for these heights and then subtract another 2-3 dB for working near
the half-power angles. Raising the antenna higher not only yields a
higher maximum gain value, but also places the TO angle nearer
to--if not within--the range of angles providing stronger
communications.
What Shape?
There are two reasons for the confinement. First, polygons with
limited numbers of sides have two general feedpoint positions. One
is at a corner, where the wire changes direction. The other is the
midpoint of a side. Of course, we can feed a loop anywhere along a
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 668
side, but, again, that would give us too many variables to cover. So
we shall look at 1 circle, but 2 triangles and 2 squares.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 669
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 670
Fig. 7 shows the patterns that result for each frequency when using
a corner-fed triangle. The nearly equal strength of the lobes
disappears, even at the lowest frequency. The antenna has a slight
beaming effect along a line that runs from the feedpoint to the
middle of the side opposite the feedpoint. In all cases, the strongest
radiation is in the direction of that far side of the triangle. Therefore,
if you use an equilateral triangle for a loop, it pays to orient the
antenna toward a primary communications target region.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 671
The square has a pattern at F that is very similar to the one for the
circle. However, from that frequency upward, everything changes.
Each pattern has fewer lobes than the corresponding pattern for a
triangle. As well, the strongest lobes are not aligned with the
feedpoint and the opposite side of the square. Instead, the
strongest lobes occur at oblique angles to the square for 2F
through 4F. Since that angle changes with the operating frequency,
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 672
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 673
The gain data is only useful in comparing the outer rings of each
pattern. Note the reduction in gain for the two triangles when
operated at 8 times the lowest frequency. I have included the data
for a 1/2-wavelength dipole at F to allow comparisons on the
various harmonics when using that antenna as a multi-band
doublet. The patterns for the doublet appear in Fig. 11. Only up to
2F (or 1-wavelength) does the doublet show its strongest lobes
broadside to the wire. Above that frequency, the strongest lobes
depart at oblique angles that change with frequency.
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 674
Conclusions
Chapter 73
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 676
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 677
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 679
The ILZX has several notable features. It uses AWG #12 wire
(0.0808" diameter). Although the wire is thin compared to the value
used in the closed loop, the power efficiency is over 96%. Instead
of viewing the antenna as an interrupted loop, let's think of it as a
folded dipole with 3" spacing between wires and with the linear
elements bent into a square that is 5.5 meters (18.04') on a side.
Like a folded dipole, the equal-diameter elements create a 4:1
impedance transformation (regardless of spacing--within limits).
Hence, a single wire version of the antenna might show a feedpoint
impedance in the 12- to 16-Ohm range. The folded version shows
an impedance in the 50- to 65-Ohm range, depending on
orientation and height above ground. With the side feedpoint
shown, the impedance is about 64 Ohms.
The difference between a linear folded dipole and the bent version
in the ILZX is the proximity of the element ends, added to the
parallel sections of the "top" and "bottom" sections. The element
tips exhibit strong coupling. Therefore, the gap between them
becomes an important means of setting the reactance at the
operating frequency. Note that the tips come to a point on each
side of the gap. If we leave the tips blunt--as we might in a regular
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 680
Let's assume that the terms "top," "bottom," and "side" have
conventional meanings relative to the ground. We may place the
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 681
With the feedpoint and capacitor both positioned at either the top or
bottom, the pattern for the relatively low and vertically oriented loop
is mostly straight up. The dominant polarization is horizontal. Fig. 3
shows the broadside and edgewise elevation patterns for some of
the cases. The left pair of elevation plots yield the most NVIS-like
upward patterns at a reasonably good gain level. The right side of
Fig. 3 shows the elevation patterns for the use of a bottom
feedpoint and a top-positioned capacitor. However, the patterns
also apply to the case in which the feedpoint is on the side and the
capacitor is at the top. The top-mounted series capacitor pattern
has a significant lower angle component, but only edgewise to the
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 682
plane of the loop. These cases appear to illustrate the fact that the
position of the series capacitor has a stronger bearing on the
pattern shape than the feedpoint position. For example, the table
suggests that the feedpoint at the bottom with the capacitor on a
side yields patterns very much like those where both the source
and the capacitor are positioned on a side.
Fig. 4 compares the elevation plots of the side-side closed loop and
the ILZX. In the configuration shown in Fig. 2, the ILZX shows a
maximum edgewise gain of 0.05 dBi at 24 degrees. The maximum
edgewise gain is -0.26 dBi at 25 degrees. The average gain of the
two antennas is almost identical, while the ILZX exhibits a slightly
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 683
more circular azimuth pattern. (With the ILZX fed at the bottom and
the gap at the top, the resulting patterns are similar to those for the
closed loop in the bottom-bottom configuration.)
When oriented at relatively low heights, both the closed loop and
the ILZX benefit from side feeding to yield low angle patterns that
benefit HF communications. Indeed, their patterns are not
sufficiently different to be detectable in ordinary operations. The
remaining question is whether there is a more decisive factor to
separate the two antennas for amateur operations. There might be,
if we assume that most amateurs prefer wider operating
bandwidths from their antennas.
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 684
Fig. 5 presents the SWR sweeps for the closed-loop and the ILZX
from 7.0 to 7.3 MHz. In each case, the curve is references to the
resonant impedance of the individual antenna. For the ILZX, the
reference impedance is 64 Ohms. The 98.5-Ohm reference
impedance of the closed loop includes the use of a 9.31-pF series
capacitor at the side feedpoint. The 2:1 SWR bandwidth of the
closed loop is 60-70 kHz. In contrast, the 2:1 SWR bandwidth of the
ILZX is about 150 kHz. As well, even without 50-Ohm matching at
the feedpoint, the rate of SWR change for the ILZX is low enough
that the internal tuners that come with many current transceivers
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 685
When we lay out the physical and the electrical properties of both
antenna types, each has advantages and disadvantages. The point
of these notes is not to recommend one over the other, but to make
the relative properties of each more readily apparent. Perhaps the
only general conclusion to these notes is the fact that if we
construct either antenna in a vertical plane and at relative low
heights, then side feeding is generally highly beneficial for long
distance operations, although bottom feeding can create a compact
NVIS antenna. Enjoy the interesting conundrum. . .
Chapter 74
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 686
E
very antenna design has a niche in the overall world of
amateur radio antennas. The one described here has a quite
small niche: it is for the individual who requires operation on
40 meters at low elevation angles, but who does not have the real
estate to erect one of the SCV (self-contained vertically polarized 1
wavelength loop) antennas. The IL-ZX provides low-elevation angle
radiation within a narrow operating bandwidth at low gain with a bi-
directional pattern and reduced radiation at higher angles. It can be
fed directly with 50-ohm coaxial cable, although a network antenna
tuner will likely be useful for increasing the usable bandwidth.
Small Loops
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 687
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 688
Large Loops
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 689
Fed in the middle of one side, the antenna offers low angle
radiation, largely vertically polarized. However, for maximum
effectiveness, the antenna requires about 10' spacing above
ground, raising its top height to about 45' or so. Figure 2 shows the
pattern of a vertically polarized 40-meter large loop.
The full-size quad loop is but one of several SCV designs for
achieving low angle vertically polarized radiation without need for a
ground plane and without high angle radiation or reception of QRM
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 690
and QRN from those upper angles. They have come into increased
use by those who have directly or indirectly read into materials
researched by ON4UN and others. Another entry in this series of
notes attempts to put into perspective the entire spectrum of SCV
antennas.
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 691
be spaced from 6" to 3' apart with corner CPVC spacers. Wire
joints should be carefully constructed and soldered. The antenna
benefits from the use of large wire sizes, with 1" wire showing an
additional 0.5 dB gain over #12 wire. Therefore, one may wish to
build the antenna from such materials as 450-ohm parallel line for
each loop to simulate fatter wire. If such a method is selected, it is
usually wise to solder a short across the parallel line periodically to
ensure equal currents on each wire. (Do not short the two loops
except at the top gap.)
Figure 4 shows two arrangements for the top gap. In one case, the
loops are brought together as a point; in the other they approach
each other as a bar across the loop ends. Since the gap is actually
the dielectric space for a capacitor formed by the loop ends, the
difference in construction can make a big difference in antenna size
and adjustment. Models of the point- gap required about 18' per
side for the antenna, with a gap between 0.2 and 1.0' wide,
depending on spacing of the loops. The flat-gap antenna, for loops
spaced at 2' and a gap of 0.8' required sides of only 17' each. The
flat-gap construction will make side length a much more sensitive
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 693
Performance
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 694
The primary signal direction of the IL is like that of the small loop:
off the edges of the loop, as shown in Figure 5. With a center
height of 15' or so, the elevation angle of maximum gain is 21 to 22
degrees, similar to SCV angles. Front-to-side ratio is generally
around 10 dB.
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 695
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 697
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 698
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 699
The maximum gain of the horizontal ILZX is about 5.1 dBi at a 37-
degree TO angle. The minimum or side gain is 3 dB less.
Nevertheless, the pattern shows considerable side-pattern
development, as displayed in Fig. 8. The graphic shows both the
vertical and horizontal components of the total pattern. The vertical
components are largely a function of ground reflections, but they
still contribute to the overall useful radiation. Since 3 dB difference
between the main and cross axes amounts to about half an S-unit,
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 700
Compared to a dipole, the horizontal ILZX holds its own quite well,
as demonstrated in Fig. 9. I modeled a resonant dipole at 50' above
average ground for comparison. The dipole's maximum gain is
about 1.1-dB higher than the maximum for the ILXZ. However, the
dipole shows about 7-dB difference between its maximum and
minimum gain, where the minimum is off the ends of the antenna.
Note that for dipoles well under 1-wavelength above ground, we do
not obtain a true figure-8, but only a peanut. Brought closer to
ground, the pattern becomes a broad oval.
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 701
Since the ILZX has a naturally oval pattern, it better approaches the
omni-directional pattern favored by many hams who have only a
single, fixed-position antenna. Erecting an ILZX requires only an 18'
by 18' space, but does require 4 corner support posts for the 40-
meter version. A version for 20 meters would require only a 9' by 9'
space and might be supported on a single mast with fiberglass
spreaders. The higher the frequency, the easier the ILZX will be to
support. Because the antenna has a pattern that approaches the
omnidirectional, it requires no rotator. However, it does call for
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 702
For a multi-band antenna, you may have better luck separating the
bands. 20-15-10 provides less element-to-element interaction than
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 703
Happy experimenting!
Chapter 75
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 704
A
lthough our subject matter refers to the 6-meter band--more
specifically, 50.5 MHz as a design frequency--the ideas in
the following notes are applicable to any other band on
which we wish to use any of the antenna designs to obtain a
horizontally polarized omni-directional pattern.
Turnstiles
The basic idea of a turnstile is not dependent upon any one type of
antenna. Any horizontally polarized antenna is a fit subject for
turnstiling. The most common type of turnstile employs two dipoles,
as sketched in Fig. 1.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 705
The dipoles are set at right angles to each other. We then run a 90-
degree long phasing line between the two to obtain quadrature, that
is, 90-degree phasing. There are more complex systems of
achieving the required phasing, but each is subject to the same
limitations. The key requirement for the simple phasing system is
that the characteristic impedance (Zo) of the phasing line must be
very close to the natural resonant impedance of the individual
dipoles. A 70-Ohm line is a good match for the dipole turnstile. The
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 706
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 707
the second lobe. The lowest lobe of the dipole turnstile has a gain
of only about 4.8 dBi. While adequate for many purposes,
designers have felt that we can do somewhat better. However, we
must always remember that when we create a nearly or perfectly
omni-directional pattern, we should always expect lower gain than
from a dipole. The dipole achieve between 7.5 and 8.0 dBi gain at
the same height because it has only two lobes, with deep nulls off
the ends. The dipole turnstile uses that same power evenly in all
directions, so there will be lower power in each direction than in the
bi-directional main lobes of the solitary dipole.
Low gain is not the sole limitation of the dipole turnstile. As we vary
the frequency, the turnstile gives us the illusion of being a simple
antenna, because the SWR remains almost constant for a very
wide frequency span. However, the pattern does not stand still. As
we vary the frequency off the design frequency, the pattern grows
increasingly less circular. Fig. 4 shows the dipole turnstile patterns
1 MHz off the design frequency.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 709
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 710
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 711
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 712
Fig. 5 shows one direction that we might go: the quad turnstile.
Essentially, the quad turnstile is two quad loops--shown in diamond
configuration--fed at the base just as we would feed two dipoles.
However, the impedance of the resonant quad loop at 6 meters
composed of #14 copper wire is about 125 Ohms. Hence, we must
make our phasing line out of RG-63, about the only available 125-
Ohm coax. The net impedance will be about 62 Ohms, which yields
an adequate coax match, especially since the quad SWR curve will
be as flat as the dipole curve. Indeed, SWR tells us almost nothing
about the performance of a turnstile, with two exceptions. It may tell
us that we have an open circuit or a short circuit somewhere along
the line. As well, it may reveal the need for some means of
suppressing common mode currents.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 713
The H-plane pattern on the right reveals the advantage of the quad
over the dipole as an antenna to put into turnstile operation. The
gain in the vertical direction does not exceed the gain in the
horizontal direction. As a result, the elevation pattern of a quad
turnstile with the center hub 1 wavelength above ground will exhibit
a main lobe that is significantly stronger than the second lobe
upward. As well, the radiation directly upward drops by about 5 dB.
Fig. 7 provides a sample elevation pattern.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 714
The key elements for these update notes are the particular
construction methods that I used, with crossed CPVC arms to
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 716
spread the wires. Fig. QT-2 shows some of the details. Note
especially the use of holes in the main mast and bolts to secure the
cross arms.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 717
Fig. QT-3 shows the method that I used to join the phase-line and
main feedline, with a plate that surrounds the mast at the bottom of
the loops. The original article provides explanations for all of the
abbreviations in the sketch.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 718
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 719
The reason for the friction fit is that Ivan uses his turnstile quad in
the field. To transport it, he can twist the elements into a flat plane.
In addition, he has used soldered connections--covered by the
PVC--for the phase-line and the main feedline connections. These
moves effectively eliminate the need for a mast extending from the
ground to the base of the antenna. In lieu of a mast, Ivan has put a
hook at the top of the central arm and hangs the antenna from a
tree limb. Fig. qt-5 provides a general idea of the antenna in use.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 720
The vertical sides are about 1.3 times the length of the horizontal
wires. The phaseline is 49" of RG-62, which has a velocity factor of
0.84 (for a 58.33" electrical length). The feedpoint impedance is so
close to 50 Ohms that the SWR does not rise above 1.1:1 across
the first MHz of 6 meters. However, SWR is never a problem with
turnstiled elements. The SWR remain nearly constant over a
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 722
bandwidth that is much wider than the bandwidth over which the
pattern holds its omni-directional shape.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 723
Unclosed Loops
Larger Loops
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 724
radiation from the legs balances into a circular pattern overall. For
this reason, only certain relationships between the center portion
and the end pieces will work. The current on the center and end
portions is not equal. Therefore, in general, the shaping of the
larger loops will be triangular. Bending the end portions towards
each other is one way to fine tune the balance of currents and the
resulting pattern.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 725
Fig. 8 shows two examples of larger loops: the wide-gap and the
narrow gap versions. The versions result from giving precedence to
one of the other goals of the exercise in addition to pattern shape.
The other two goals are the feedpoint impedance and the distance
between the tips of the loop ends. In general, with larger loops, the
two goals are not compatible.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 726
The top of Fig. 9 shows the elevation pattern of the antenna at the
1-wavelength height. The vertical radiation (straight up) is several
dB lower than for the quad loop.
Let's return to Fig. 8 and examine the lower loop. Here the gap is
narrowed to 0.5" so that aligning the ends becomes a much simpler
mechanical process. To sustain a circular pattern, the 1/4" diameter
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 727
element is 62" long in the center portion. The ends are 52.9" long,
resulting in a 43" distance between the center element section and
the tips.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 728
Both loops require that we place series capacitors in the line at the
feedpoint terminals. The total capacitance for the wide-gap version
is 4.98 pF, while the total for the narrow-gap version is 5.48 pF.
These numbers are unduly precise, because construction variables
will create considerable differences in the feedpoint inductive
reactance.
Smaller Loops
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 729
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 730
Fig. 10 shows the general outline of the rectangle forming the IL-
ZX. The short portions are 25" long per side, while the longer
sections are 41". There is a gap, which is set at 1". Note that the
loop resembles a mutilated folded dipole. Only one wire of the over-
under pair is fed. The gap consists of parallel wires, each 4" long,
the spacing between the upper and lower wires.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 731
the wires at the gap into arrow points, thus reducing the rate of
change of capacitance between ends as the gap spacing is
changed. However, changing the gap spacing with the present
arrangement also creates only slow changes in feedpoint
reactance.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 732
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 733
Equally important is the fact that a stack will lower the overall take-
off angle of the array. If the lower antenna is at 1 wavelength height
and the upper is at 1.5 wavelengths, then the take off angle will
drop from 13 degrees to 10 degrees. For a stack of 2 IL-ZXs, the
gain will be about 8.2 dBi.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 735
Fig. 12 shows the azimuth and elevation patterns for a stack of two
IL-ZX antennas. The circular azimuth pattern appears solely to
confirm that we may stack these types of loops without redesign, as
is required by stacked dipole turnstiles.
Uniform-Current Loops
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 736
In real terms for 50.4 MHz, each AWG #12 wire section is 28.1"
long. The square is 49.2" on a side for a circumference of 196.7".
Note that the sections (7) do not correspond to the sides (4), which
is no hindrance to effective antenna operation. One model of the
antenna looks like the outline in Fig. 13.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 737
goal of the open-ended CCD long doublet, but the open ends
preclude obtaining that result.).
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 738
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 739
If you compare the elevation patterns with the one shown for the
triangle, you will see that the loop produces virtually no radiation
straight upward, leaving more energy for the lower lobes. Since the
antenna does not need to compensate for rapidly changing
reactance values, it shows a reasonable SWR bandwidth. As
shown in Fig. 15, the 2:1 50-Ohm SWR range is 50 to 50.85 MHz.
Once you arrive at a usable wire section length and employ the
most precise and well-matched set of capacitors that will handle the
anticipated power level, you can change the exact center frequency
by altering the wire length, since the same capacitance within about
0.1 pF will hold good for nearly a 400-kHz change in center
frequency.
Conclusion
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 740
In the end, it is doubtful whether the loop designs are any less
finicky than the turnstiles. Instead, they simply change the places in
construction and design that require close attention to detail.
Producing a circular pattern that is horizontally polarized is no
mean feat, whatever the design direction we take.
Chapter 76
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 741
T
he "terminated, tilted folded dipole" (T2FD) antenna has been
subject to much recent conversation, some of which has
come my way in the form of questions about modeling the
antenna. So I decided to take a systematic look at models of the
T2FD. The original T2FD was intended for use as a vertical or a
sloping antenna, often as an appendage to the tall tower. Later
(WWII), the antenna found use as a horizontal "all-band" wire
antenna used in either flat or inverted-V configurations. These
notes will deal largely with the vertical and sloping versions. For
further and deeper looks into the horizontal versions, see Chapter
28 in Volume 2 of this series on Wire Antennas.
folded and dipoles, although not folded dipoles in the normal sense
of that term. The resistor placed opposite the feedpoint limits the
impedance excursions at the feedpoint relative to an unterminated
folded dipole. At the same time, the resistor also introduces losses
into the antenna in the form of converting some of the RF energy
into heat.
Both antennas are designed for use from 2 MHz through 30 MHz
as initial design criteria. We shall explore limitations in that
frequency spread along the way. The "Wide-Long" version
coincides with standard construction formulations, since the
antenna is about 300/F(MHz) long and 10/F(MHz) wide.
(Excessively fussy cutting formulas for this antenna are largely
superfluous, since strict resonance is not in question.) The "Narrow-
Short" version generally approximates or approaches the
dimensions of commercial versions of the T2FD, even if that name
is not used for the antenna. Both antennas use #12 copper wire.
Modeling the T2FD involves nothing that in any way presses the
limitations of NEC (either -2 or -4), so long as the segment length in
the long wires is not out of balance with the segment length in the
short wires and as long as sufficient segments are used per
wavelength for all frequencies to be investigated. In short, nothing
in the antenna design suggests that NEC should not give accurate
predictions of performance.
Since these are notes on two models of the T2FD, they do not yield
more than suggestive results. Hence, nothing in these notes should
be construed as fixed, final, or necessarily in rebuttal of existing
claims, many of which may be based on different version of the
antenna type.
All modeling runs for the T2FD (both versions) were made with the
antenna lower end 20' above average ground and with the antenna
vertical. Check runs with the antenna tilted 45 degrees produced
no significant differences in the impedance results.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 744
Fig. 2 shows the results of the 390-300 Ohm combination for the
standard T2FD configuration cut for 2 MHz. (The model used is the
165' long wide version from Fig. 1. Although called a 2-MHz
antenna, the antenna is about 1.2-wavelength long at 3 MHz.) The
SWR excursions are very wide, ranging from about 1.2:1 to nearly
9:1.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 745
Freq. R +/- jX
4 1435 - j 615
10 1085 - j 700
16 855 - j 665
22 690 - j 575
28 590 - j 466
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 746
Interestingly, the narrow version of the T2FD with its shorter length
(100') also required an SWR standard of 900 Ohms, with a
terminating resistor only 50 Ohms less (that is, 800 Ohms) than that
used for the optimized wide T2FD version.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 747
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 748
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 749
In Fig. 6, we find the elevation pattern for the same vertical antenna
at 10 MHz. (Note that the wider standard configuration tends to
show some pattern displacement to one side or the other, due to
the spacing of the wires. The more dominant side depends on the
frequency of operation. The narrow version shows an almost
perfectly circular pattern.)
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 750
The explanation for these less than optimal patterns is the nature of
the antenna. Although terminated, the antenna is still a folded
doublet and shows in free space all of the pattern tendencies of any
dipole. So long as the antenna is 1.25 wl long or less, then there is
in free space a single main lobe broadside to the antenna wire. (In
the range of 1.1 to 1.35 wl long, the antenna shows the side lobes
typical of the extended double Zepp.) The main lobe, when the
antenna is vertically oriented over ground, results in a low-angle
lobe of radiation or reception sensitivity.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 751
As the antenna length approaches 1.5 wl, the broadside lobes give
way to dominant angular lobes relative to the plane of the wire.
When the antenna is vertically oriented, these lobes combine to
form high angle radiation maxima, with low angle radiation either
much reduced or wholly absent.
The standard T2FD at 165' long reaches the 1.25 wl limit at about
7.5 MHz, while the shorter 100' version reaches the same limit at
about 12.3 MHz. Beyond 8 MHz for one and 13 MHz for the other,
high angle patterns become standard. When any version of a T2FD
reaches a length relative to the operating frequency of more than
1.25 MHz, its utility for low angle radiation may become less than
desired.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 752
All of the patterns shown so far use a vertical T2FD. Tilting the
T2FD alters its pattern considerably. Modeling does not confirm
reports of omni-directional performance from a tilted T2FD. We may
illustrate this fact with a simple comparison at 5 MHz using the
standard version of the T2FD. In one pattern, the antenna is
vertical; in the other, it is tilted 45 degrees.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 753
Fig. 9 shows the two patterns. The vertically oriented T2FD shows
minimal pattern displacement from one direction to the other.
However, the tilted version shows a heavy pattern displacement,
but in neither direction is the radiation field as strong as at the peak
of the lowest lobe of the vertical version.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 754
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 755
Although transmitting uses have been made of the T2FD, its chief
use appears to be as a short wave reception antenna. In this
application, the excess available receiver gain can largely make up
for losses incurred in the terminating resistor.
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 756
Fig. 11 is notable because it tracks the SWR curves for the two
versions of the T2FD in quite interesting ways. The lowest losses in
the wide or standard version of the T2FD (165' long) occur at the
same frequencies as the peaks in SWR. For the shorter (100')
version, the lowest loss points show a slight displacement (1 MHz)
but occur at the same intervals. The actual loss within the resistor is
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 757
Conclusion
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 758
Chapter 77
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 759
I
have written elsewhere about dual-band linear-resonator dipoles
for the upper HF region that used elements having a substantial
diameter. 20-meter main elements used 7/8" tubing, while 15-
meter main elements used 3/4" tubing. One major consequence of
the material selection was our ability to use a fairly wide separation
between the main element and the 1/4"-diameter linear-resonator
rod. We centered our focus on 6", but explored some narrower and
wider spacing values between 4" and 8".
In this look into the land of linear resonators, we shall reduce the
main element diameter to wire size. One consequence of the
reduction is that we shall be able to use the same diameter material
for both the main element and the linear resonator. Since all wires
in the NEC-4 models will have the same diameter, the modeling
accuracy, as indicated by the average gain test (AGT) scores,
should improve. However, there will be a second consequence for
the models (and for any physical implementation of a wire-based
linear-resonator dipole). The ability to find acceptable dimensions to
achieve a set of resonant points on 2 bands with a 50-Ohm SWR of
less than 2:1 depends in large measure on the mutual coupling
between the parallel wires within the linear-resonator section of the
antenna. Since we are wholly dependent on the wires as linear
inductors for the mutual coupling, the degree of coupling depends
upon the wire diameters and the spacing between them. As we
reduce the diameter of the wires, we must bring them closer
together to achieve the same level of coupling.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 760
Suppose that we reduce the wire size by a factor of 7:1. That is,
suppose that we reduce the diameter from 7/8" to about 1/8". The
required spacing between the wires is roughly proportional to the
element diameter. Hence, the spacing between the main element
and the linear-resonator rod will decrease from about 6" to the
vicinity of 1". As we shall see, the narrow spacing will be quite
critical in dual-band dipoles with small ratios between the upper and
lower frequencies, but will be less critical with higher frequency
ratios.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 761
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 762
#8. The proximity of the wires does not yield perfect AGT scores.
However, the values (0.985-0.988) are significantly improved
relative to earlier models that had junctions of wires with different
diameters.
The close spacing between the wires does not affect the general
radiation pattern of the dipole. As shown in Fig. 2, the 15-meter
performance includes slightly high gain and a slightly narrower
beamwidth than we obtain on 20 meters. The free-space patterns
show a 0.5-dB difference in gain. In the plane formed by the main
element and the resonator rod, the close spacing does make a
difference. In this plane, the front-to-back ratio is down to 0.1 dB, a
reduction from the 0.5-dB value we obtained from the fatter model.
As a consequence, the 15-meter pattern shows deeper side nulls
than we obtained using fatter elements: about 25 dB below the
level of maximum gain.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 763
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 764
The peak 50-Ohm SWR value between bands was between 5:1
and 6:1 for the fatter models of Part 1. For our wire versions, the
peak value will climb to the 8:1 or higher region. The actual value is
not important in operation, but it does provide a caution to
experimenters. Finding the precise values for all dimensions,
including the capacitor setting, will likely be somewhat more finicky
for a wire-base dipole than for a tube-based dipole.
By the terms of our project, we are looking for dimensions that will
produce 50-Ohm coverage on both 20 and 15 meters with less than
a 2:1 SWR. (Indeed, if we forget this project specification, we might
as well use a simple wire with a parallel feedline and an antenna
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 765
The first set of tests will use AWG #8 wire throughout. A simple
dipole for 14.175 MHz would normally require a length of about
403". One feature that we shall look for is the amount of reduction
that the use of a linear resonator forces on the overall element
length. With the tubular models, we found a usable constant main-
element length that was about 14" or 3.5% shorter than a self-
resonant 20-meter dipole. Shifting to wire does not change the level
of reduction, but it does introduce a new factor into the building
equation. Changing the length of the resonator also requires a
change in the length of the main element. For every 4" decrease in
resonator rod length, we find a 2" increase in the main element
length.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 766
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 767
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 768
The 92" resonator rod that gave us the best 20-meter SWR curve
produces the least satisfactory SWR curve on 15 meters--although
the performance is usable. As the rod length increases, the SWR
curve tends to improve, at least through the 100" length. Further
increases in rod length degrade the SWR curve. Nevertheless, all
of the 15-meter curves within the set are usable. In general, 15-
meter performance is less problematical than 20-meter
performance with a wire-based dual-band dipole.
For further tests, I selected the model that used a 100" rod and a
386" main-element length as perhaps (but not absolutely) the best
compromise in performance on both bands. The next test involves
seeing what happens as we increase the spacing in small
increments from the 1" initial value. (I judged that a smaller spacing
is probably not feasible in most practical applications.) In these
tests, the wire diameter remains constant (AWG #8). However, all
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 769
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 770
The mid-band impedance values for 20 meters suggest that the 50-
Ohm SWR curve may grow less satisfactory as we increase the
spacing between wires. Fig. 6 confirms the suspicion. Indeed,
although the curve for 2" spacing appears barely to meet the
standard, it might not be so easy a matter to place that curve
precisely when pruning an actual antenna. In general, 20-meter
performance depends upon using the narrowest feasible spacing
between the resonator and the main element wires.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 771
The 15-meter 50-Ohm SWR curves in Fig. 7 tell much the same
story. As the spacing increases, the SWR curves grow less
satisfactory. On 15 meters, the problem is not a decreasing
feedpoint impedance. Rather, the problem arises from an
increasing resonant impedance. The bottom line for the spacing
tests is that a wire-based linear-resonator dipole does not offer the
flexibility of fatter elements. Narrow spacing is a requisite on both
bands when the frequency ratio is fairly low.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 772
The table has a special section noting the most optimal settings for
the AWG #6 sample. By increasing the length of the resonator rod
8", we obtain a marginally higher 20-meter impedance. We also
obtain a superior 15-meter impedance and a capacitor value that
approximates the value used with AWG #8 wire at its optimal
resonator rod length. I did not include in the table models for AWG
#10 and #12 wire with similar adjustments to the resonator lengths.
Each of those models would have required significant resonator-rod
shortening to obtain the desired 15-meter results. However, those
rod lengths would have produced lower impedances on 20 meters,
disallowing the use of the antenna on that band within the project
terms of a maximum 2:1 SWR value.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 773
With the values shown in the table, the 20-meter SWR curves
become increasingly marginal as we reduce the wire size, as
revealed by Fig. 8. The major problem of trying to optimize the
resonator rod lengths with thinner wire is not so much the mid-band
impedance. We likely can find a satisfactory impedance with less
than a 2:1 50-Ohm SWR. The major difficulty lies at the band
edges, where every reduction in resistance provides the reactance
with a proportionately higher influence on the SWR level.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 774
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 776
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 777
In concert with the 20-15-meter wire antenna, the 20-10 wire model
shows a much higher 50-Ohm SWR peak value between operating
frequencies than did the fat-element antenna for the same
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 778
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 779
The initial test involves finding the resonator rod length and the
corresponding capacitor value that most closely approaches
perfection on both bands, as determined by the SWR curves. In
fact, I found no significant reason to vary the main element from
392" in the entire set of test runs. The 10-meter resonator rods
average about 20" longer than the rods required by the 20-15 wire
model. Table 4 shows the results for varying the rod length from
112" up to 124".
The table shows mid-band impedances for 20 meters that are very
close to those found in fat-element models. For the larger
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 780
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 781
All of the curves show just above a 2:1 SWR at 28 MHz. However,
only the shorter rod lengths provide coverage as high as 28.7 MHz
with a 2:1 SWR. The mid-band impedance values in Table 4 do not
themselves reveal the more rapid change of impedance for each
small frequency increment, relative to the fat-element models that
allowed coverage of a full MHz of the band. One of the limitations of
the 20-10 thin-wire model, then, is reduced upper-band coverage.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 782
In all cases, the main element held its length. The 20-meter mid-
band impedance does show a small decline as we increase the
spacing. However, the decrease is in no way fatal to the SWR
curves, which appear in Fig. 15. In fact, I have not identified the
curves individually, since they form too tight a group to distinguish
individual lines.
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 783
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 784
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 785
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 786
Although the use of AWG #12 wire is not fatal to the construction of
a 20-10 combination with 1" element-to-rod spacing, the narrower
operating bandwidth will make antenna adjustment more difficult.
As well, as we increase the diameter of the element, we also gain
some flexibility in selecting the rod-to-element spacing.
Nevertheless, for any size element, the most difficult adjustment to
master and to make endure through all kinds of weather will be the
capacitance.
Conclusion
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 787
Chapter 78
Antennas Made of Wire – Volume 3 788
Chapter 78
Wide-Band Yagi Notes - Volume 2 1
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