[digitalradio] Re: Half Square Antenna

2010-08-23 Thread kf4hou
Hey Tom

Which is the better way of feeding the Half Square what is the plus and minus 
of both? Voltage vs. Current Fed 



 I used a half square on 17 meters in Colorado in 1995 at the bottom of the 
 sunspot cycle. I voltage fed it with a parallel LC network and one 1/4 wave 
 radial. The flat top phasing line was only 13 feet off of the ground with 
 the antenna broadside Europe and the Pacific. The results: 100 countries in 
 30 days with 100 watts. A serious DX antenna.
 
 I also put up a half square on 160 in Colorado, with the same voltage feed. 
 I linear loaded each 1/4 wave leg into two each 1/8 wave 64 foot sections 
 and it worked fantastic. I had a big signal with 100 watts.
 
 73  GUD DX,
 Thomas F. Giella, NZ4O
 Lakeland, FL, USA
 n...@...
 
 
 NZ4O Amateur  SWL Autobiography: http://www.nz4o.org





Re: [digitalradio] Re: Half Square Antenna

2010-08-23 Thread Andy obrien
On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 6:29 AM, kf4hou kf4...@hotmail.com wrote:



 Hey Tom

 Which is the better way of feeding the Half Square what is the plus and minus 
 of both? Voltage vs. Current Fed



The antenna may be fed at the bottom or at a corner. When
 fed at a corner, the feed point is a lowimpedance, current-feed. When fed at
the bottom of one of the wires against a  small ground counterpoise, the feed
 point is a high-impedance, voltage-feed.
http://rudys.typepad.com/ant/files/antenna_halfsquare_array.pdf

Andy K3UK


Re: [digitalradio] Re: Half Square Antenna

2010-08-23 Thread KH6TY
For what it's worth, I've done it both ways. With a voltage feed it is 
easy for the coax to leave the antenna on the ground and just use a 
screen for a ground. With current feed at the corners, the coax is up in 
the air and needs to leave at right angles to the vertical wire, but no 
tuned circuit is needed, and no RF ground.


73, Skip KH6TY

kf4hou wrote:
 


Hey Tom

Which is the better way of feeding the Half Square what is the plus 
and minus of both? Voltage vs. Current Fed