[Lf] [Fwd: Re: LF: Other transmission lines]

Andre Kesteloot andre.kesteloot at verizon.net
Fri May 9 17:35:09 CDT 2003



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: LF: Other transmission lines
Date: Fri, 9 May 2003 21:00:21 +0100
From: "g3ldo" <g3ldo at ukonline.co.uk>
Reply-To: rsgb_lf_group at blacksheep.org
To: <rsgb_lf_group at blacksheep.org>
References: <E19DpOo-0007nG-00 at jandor.look.ca> 
<5.1.0.14.0.20030509160755.00b1f438 at gemini.herts.ac.uk>



Jim & LFers
> Getting back to the topic of LF antennas, another useful type of feed
> method for LF antennas is the "450ohm unbalanced air line", or, to the
> layman, the "bit of wire hanging in the air". The idea is to have a
loading
> coil at the feed point of the antenna as normal, but with about 90 - 95%
of
> the inductance required to achieve resonance. This is then connected back
> to the shack by a single wire, where the other 5 - 10% of the inductance
is
> located, which is made variable so that tuning can be performed in the
> shack.

I have always used this system and find that it works very well. I didn't
have a name for it and just referred to them as the matching and tuning
circuit and the loading coil. In my installation the two are displaced by
around 2m with the "bit of wire hanging in the air" just over 2m high. I had
never thought of it as a transmission line.
With the arrangement used at Amberley museum the two components were
displaced by around 8m.
Just a thought. Where should you connect the system to ground if the two
components are some distance apart? Conventional wisdom suggests it should
be under the loading coil.

Regards,
Peter, G3LDO

e-mail 

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