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Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna



 
 
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  #11  
Old October 31st 15, 10:28 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 190
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 4:21:12 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Well, this is an old discussion.
I already published my home built bottom fed Flarm (and ADSB) dipole antennas 2 years ago.
https://sites.google.com/site/threeu...flarm-antennas
By now, my antennas are painted black.

Thanks 3U for contributing. Yes I'm familiar with your work and website. I wish you would expand your article to include "how to" details so DIY guys like me could fabricate their own antennas.

Regarding PowerFLARM antenna A, what amount of signal degradation would be experienced if there were two "A" antennas by means of some sort of splitter?
  #12  
Old October 31st 15, 10:53 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_5_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,224
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Sat, 31 Oct 2015 15:28:07 -0700, bensoaring wrote:

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 4:21:12 PM UTC-4,
wrote:
Well, this is an old discussion.
I already published my home built bottom fed Flarm (and ADSB) dipole
antennas 2 years ago.
https://sites.google.com/site/threeu...rm/powerflarm-

antennas
By now, my antennas are painted black.

Thanks 3U for contributing. Yes I'm familiar with your work and
website. I wish you would expand your article to include "how to"
details so DIY guys like me could fabricate their own antennas.

Regarding PowerFLARM antenna A, what amount of signal degradation would
be experienced if there were two "A" antennas by means of some sort of
splitter?


A thought: you can pick up nylon-covered steel trace (1.3mm OD, the steel
trace is 1.0mm diameter from eBay (10m for $8.95) and good fishing shops
also stock it. Crimp the end over and add a blob of epoxy for eye
protection and there's a very thin antenna. On a glare shield one of
these would be almost invisible. The older Swiss FLARMs, used antennae
which were just a 1/4 wave length of what looked like 0.8mm (1/32") music
wire mounted at the centre of a circular 80mm diameter metal ground
plane.

The fox-hunting crowd, i.e. orienteers who run XC in search of a hidden
radio beacon) make Yagi DF antennae from steel tape-measures and plastic
plumbing pipe which seem to work pretty well, so would this nylon-coated
steel trace be any good for making up PowerFLARM dipoles or bottom-fed
antennae?

I'd be interested to hear what somebody who understands antennae thinks
about using this stuff or even thinner trace material: it is available
down to 20 lb breaking strain.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |
  #13  
Old November 1st 15, 12:20 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 190
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 6:56:02 PM UTC-4, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Sat, 31 Oct 2015 15:28:07 -0700, bensoaring wrote:

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 4:21:12 PM UTC-4,
wrote:
Well, this is an old discussion.
I already published my home built bottom fed Flarm (and ADSB) dipole
antennas 2 years ago.
https://sites.google.com/site/threeu...rm/powerflarm-

antennas
By now, my antennas are painted black.

Thanks 3U for contributing. Yes I'm familiar with your work and
website. I wish you would expand your article to include "how to"
details so DIY guys like me could fabricate their own antennas.

Regarding PowerFLARM antenna A, what amount of signal degradation would
be experienced if there were two "A" antennas by means of some sort of
splitter?


A thought: you can pick up nylon-covered steel trace (1.3mm OD, the steel
trace is 1.0mm diameter from eBay (10m for $8.95) and good fishing shops
also stock it. Crimp the end over and add a blob of epoxy for eye
protection and there's a very thin antenna. On a glare shield one of
these would be almost invisible. The older Swiss FLARMs, used antennae
which were just a 1/4 wave length of what looked like 0.8mm (1/32") music
wire mounted at the centre of a circular 80mm diameter metal ground
plane.

The fox-hunting crowd, i.e. orienteers who run XC in search of a hidden
radio beacon) make Yagi DF antennae from steel tape-measures and plastic
plumbing pipe which seem to work pretty well, so would this nylon-coated
steel trace be any good for making up PowerFLARM dipoles or bottom-fed
antennae?

I'd be interested to hear what somebody who understands antennae thinks
about using this stuff or even thinner trace material: it is available
down to 20 lb breaking strain.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |


Smiling...us redneck bass fisherman know this as nylon coated stainless steel fishing leader.
  #14  
Old November 1st 15, 01:55 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Roy Clark, \B6\
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 88
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

Does one of those neat caps in the photo come with each unit?

  #15  
Old November 1st 15, 08:39 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_5_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,224
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Sat, 31 Oct 2015 17:20:18 -0700, bensoaring wrote:

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 6:56:02 PM UTC-4, Martin Gregorie
wrote:
On Sat, 31 Oct 2015 15:28:07 -0700, bensoaring wrote:

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 4:21:12 PM UTC-4,
wrote:
Well, this is an old discussion.
I already published my home built bottom fed Flarm (and ADSB) dipole
antennas 2 years ago.
https://sites.google.com/site/threeu...rm/powerflarm-

antennas
By now, my antennas are painted black.

Thanks 3U for contributing. Yes I'm familiar with your work and
website. I wish you would expand your article to include "how to"
details so DIY guys like me could fabricate their own antennas.

Regarding PowerFLARM antenna A, what amount of signal degradation
would be experienced if there were two "A" antennas by means of some
sort of splitter?


A thought: you can pick up nylon-covered steel trace (1.3mm OD, the
steel trace is 1.0mm diameter from eBay (10m for $8.95) and good
fishing shops also stock it. Crimp the end over and add a blob of epoxy
for eye protection and there's a very thin antenna. On a glare shield
one of these would be almost invisible. The older Swiss FLARMs, used
antennae which were just a 1/4 wave length of what looked like 0.8mm
(1/32") music wire mounted at the centre of a circular 80mm diameter
metal ground plane.

The fox-hunting crowd, i.e. orienteers who run XC in search of a hidden
radio beacon) make Yagi DF antennae from steel tape-measures and
plastic plumbing pipe which seem to work pretty well, so would this
nylon-coated steel trace be any good for making up PowerFLARM dipoles
or bottom-fed antennae?

I'd be interested to hear what somebody who understands antennae thinks
about using this stuff or even thinner trace material: it is available
down to 20 lb breaking strain.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org |


Smiling...us redneck bass fisherman know this as nylon coated stainless
steel fishing leader.


I don't fish (well, once or twice trolling for trout on Lake Taupo) and
have only used this steel trace (the UK term) for connecting controls to
the timer in free flight model aircraft.

Would you use it for a FLARM antenna? I suppose you'd have to crimp the
feeder connection as its unlikely to take solder.

BTW, here's a link to one of those Yagis. In case you're wondering, the
reason they like 'em is partly because they're light and partly because
you can crash through the undergrowth with one without breaking or
bending it:

http://theleggios.net/wb2hol/projects/rdf/tape_bm.htm


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |
  #16  
Old November 7th 15, 02:26 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
SoaringXCellence
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 385
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Sunday, November 1, 2015 at 1:41:26 AM UTC-7, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Sat, 31 Oct 2015 17:20:18 -0700, bensoaring wrote:

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 6:56:02 PM UTC-4, Martin Gregorie
wrote:
On Sat, 31 Oct 2015 15:28:07 -0700, bensoaring wrote:

On Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 4:21:12 PM UTC-4,
wrote:
Well, this is an old discussion.
I already published my home built bottom fed Flarm (and ADSB) dipole
antennas 2 years ago.
https://sites.google.com/site/threeu...rm/powerflarm-
antennas
By now, my antennas are painted black.

Thanks 3U for contributing. Yes I'm familiar with your work and
website. I wish you would expand your article to include "how to"
details so DIY guys like me could fabricate their own antennas.

Regarding PowerFLARM antenna A, what amount of signal degradation
would be experienced if there were two "A" antennas by means of some
sort of splitter?

A thought: you can pick up nylon-covered steel trace (1.3mm OD, the
steel trace is 1.0mm diameter from eBay (10m for $8.95) and good
fishing shops also stock it. Crimp the end over and add a blob of epoxy
for eye protection and there's a very thin antenna. On a glare shield
one of these would be almost invisible. The older Swiss FLARMs, used
antennae which were just a 1/4 wave length of what looked like 0.8mm
(1/32") music wire mounted at the centre of a circular 80mm diameter
metal ground plane.

The fox-hunting crowd, i.e. orienteers who run XC in search of a hidden
radio beacon) make Yagi DF antennae from steel tape-measures and
plastic plumbing pipe which seem to work pretty well, so would this
nylon-coated steel trace be any good for making up PowerFLARM dipoles
or bottom-fed antennae?

I'd be interested to hear what somebody who understands antennae thinks
about using this stuff or even thinner trace material: it is available
down to 20 lb breaking strain.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org |


Smiling...us redneck bass fisherman know this as nylon coated stainless
steel fishing leader.


I don't fish (well, once or twice trolling for trout on Lake Taupo) and
have only used this steel trace (the UK term) for connecting controls to
the timer in free flight model aircraft.

Would you use it for a FLARM antenna? I suppose you'd have to crimp the
feeder connection as its unlikely to take solder.

BTW, here's a link to one of those Yagis. In case you're wondering, the
reason they like 'em is partly because they're light and partly because
you can crash through the undergrowth with one without breaking or
bending it:

http://theleggios.net/wb2hol/projects/rdf/tape_bm.htm


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |


Yagi antenna are great for highly directional transmit/receive. I.E. if you placed a yagi/flarm antenna pointing forward, the signal in any other direction would be practically non-existant. Not a good choice for a signal you want to send/receive in all directions.

Mike
  #17  
Old November 7th 15, 05:33 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_5_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,224
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Fri, 06 Nov 2015 18:26:37 -0800, SoaringXCellence wrote:

Yagi antenna are great for highly directional transmit/receive.
I.E. if you placed a yagi/flarm antenna pointing forward, the signal
in any other direction would be practically non-existant.
Not a good choice for a signal you want to send/receive in all
directions.


Of course. I know that: re-read the last few posts on the thread.

I was asking if anybody had experience with using nylon-coated steel
fishing trace for bottom-fed 1/4 wave FLARM dipoles. Its so thin you'd
soon cease to notice antennas made of it mounted on top of your glare
shield.



--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |
  #18  
Old November 8th 15, 12:40 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_5_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,224
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 17:33:00 +0000, Martin Gregorie wrote:

On Fri, 06 Nov 2015 18:26:37 -0800, SoaringXCellence wrote:

Yagi antenna are great for highly directional transmit/receive. I.E. if
you placed a yagi/flarm antenna pointing forward, the signal in any
other direction would be practically non-existant.
Not a good choice for a signal you want to send/receive in all
directions.


Of course. I know that: re-read the last few posts on the thread.

I was asking if anybody had experience with using nylon-coated steel
fishing trace for bottom-fed 1/4 wave FLARM dipoles. Its so thin you'd
soon cease to notice antennas made of it mounted on top of your glare
shield.


For 'dipole' read 'antenna'. Sorry 'bout that.



--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |
  #19  
Old November 9th 15, 04:44 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
ND
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 314
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

Flarm antennaes are HIDEOUS. i would HATE to put one of those into my cockpit. in fact it would be one of the reasons i would decide not to put a unit it. now, before starting an argument, i'm not anti-flarm. but i AM anti ****ty hideous flarm antennae. i didn't spend all that time making our glider cockpit beautiful to stick that ugly piece right in my forward field of vision. ew.
  #20  
Old November 9th 15, 09:47 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
kirk.stant
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,260
Default Dreaming of a BETTER PowerFLARM antenna

On Monday, November 9, 2015 at 10:44:25 AM UTC-6, ND wrote:
Flarm antennaes are HIDEOUS. i would HATE to put one of those into my cockpit. in fact it would be one of the reasons i would decide not to put a unit it. now, before starting an argument, i'm not anti-flarm. but i AM anti ****ty hideous flarm antennae. i didn't spend all that time making our glider cockpit beautiful to stick that ugly piece right in my forward field of vision. ew.


Hmm, you obviously are in the "die early and leave a good looking corpse" camp!

Me, I can take a hideous antenna if it works. Just put it where you won't see it!

Cheers,

Kirk
66
 




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