Shaun Oliver  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

if I were to make a dipole, would coiling it round a piece of plastic piping decrease the efficiency of the thing? I intend on making one for 40 meters, one for 80 meters, and one for 10 meters. I've worked out that1 meter of piping will suffice for each leg of each antenna.
thanks in advance.
shaun

Cookie, K5EWJ wrote:

Shaun, it will decrease the efficiency drastically.  A
two meter long 80 meter dipole will be about 10% as
efficient as one 40 meters long at the same height.

You
can't cheat the laws of physics, they work the same
even if no body is watching.  In
addition, the antenna you are considering will have an
impedance of only an ohm or two and be almost
impossible to match.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

While Cookie's comments are true, there is a useful type of short antenna known as a Normal Mode Helix, which if built, tuned and matched correctly can work as well as a full size dipole at the same height - although its VSWR (say 2:1 for example) bandwidth is narrower than that of a full size dipole. It consists of wire wound around a fibreglass or plastic rod / pipe with the turns spaced, not closewound. If plastic pipe is used it must have good RF 'Insulating' characteristics i.e if a piece 'cooks' when placed in a microwave oven, when your XYL is not looking, do not use that material. For 80m and 40m a pipe diameter of 2 1/2 inches is about right, for 10m 3/4 inch or thereabouts. The total length of wire in a NM Helix 'dipole' is approximately one wavelength, equations do exist which could be used to calculate the length but I have yet to find an equation which is exact enough to eliminate the need to tweak. The length of pipe for a 40m NM Helical 'dipole' is close to 6 metres, the length could be reduced by increasing the pipe's diameter but there is a limit beyond which the radiation pattern suffers. Very short and effective NM Helix antennas have been built using additional end loading such as hats, but their drive point impedance is very low and difficult to match efficiently and the VSWR bandwidth becomes narrower.

The 'Rubber Duck' antenna sometimes used on mobile phones is one type of NM Helix antenna.

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD



_______________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Post to: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com

Reply via email to