1 / 21

Exploring Antennas

Exploring Antennas. Van Warren AE5CC. Exploring Antennas: Pattern. D esign S imulate M easure R efine. Exploring Antennas: Rule 1. Don’t reinvent the wheel. Explore and understand successful designs before inventing new ones. Exploring Antennas: 2m.

efrat
Télécharger la présentation

Exploring Antennas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exploring Antennas Van Warren AE5CC

  2. Exploring Antennas: Pattern D esign S imulate M easure R efine

  3. Exploring Antennas: Rule 1 Don’t reinvent the wheel. Explore and understand successful designs before inventing new ones.

  4. Exploring Antennas: 2m Single Most Important Parameter: Wavelength Middle of band is 146 MHz Middle of CW band is 144.05 MHz

  5. Exploring Antennas: 2m Middle of band is 146 MHz 146 MHz = 2.053 meters = 6.7 feet = 80.83 inches Full Wavelength

  6. Exploring Antennas: 2m General Purpose 2m Antenna in free space.

  7. Exploring Antennas: 2m General Purpose 2m Antenna with Ground Plane (-5 Hz shift)

  8. Exploring Antennas: 2m General Purpose Ground Plane Antenna.

  9. Exploring Antennas: 2m General Purpose Antenna at 144 MHz In Free Space

  10. Exploring Antennas: 2m General Purpose Antenna with Ground Plane at 144 MHz

  11. Exploring Antennas: 2m Same Antenna at 900 MHz (33 cm band).

  12. Exploring Antennas: Loops Now duplicate argument using tetrahedral geometry reasoning from the simplex argument and minimal materials and tesselation of sphere for balloon borne 2m antenna. Also reduce to ¼ wave and compare gain with full wavelength cases.

  13. Exploring Antennas: Loops Design Antenna Simulate Antenna Measure Antenna Improve

  14. Design Antenna: Requirements Use 42 AWG DX: 1 – 1000 MHz TX: 80 – 2m 50 watts Aesthetic, preferably invisible Low Lightning Hazard Low Structural Hazard Easily Relocated Inexpensive

  15. Design First Pass: Wire Loop 0.0025 in diameter Materials 42 AWG  DX: 1 – 1000 MHz TX: 80 – 2m Aesthetic, preferably invisible  Low Lightning Hazard  Low Structural Hazard  Easily Relocated  Inexpensive 

  16. Design Pass: Vary Parameters - Start: 42 AWG - 0.00125” radius Observe Effects of: Wire Diameter Variation Frequency Variation Loop Geometry Variation add recursive elements in plane/out of plane elements - 160, 80, 40, 20, 10, 6, 2, 0.7, 0.3 meters - 1.9, 3.5, 7, 14, 28, 50, 144, 420, 902 MHz

  17. “Large” Circular loop has relatively flat frequency response, but surprisingly, high directionality! (front/side ratio) This borders on discovery! Compare with microphone gain patterns and yagi’s or “beam” antennas. Total gain @ 20 MHz Results suggest a wire loop Can be “aimed” by simply Changing the feed point. Suggests a new radar antenna. Stationary loop, moving feed point. What is radiative efficiency?

  18. Need a program that will let me preprogram a series of mouse positions, clicks and key presses, to create animations of the gain patterns of these loop antennas. These are necessary and wonderful animations.

More Related