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But most 'modern' composite gliders have carbon in the fuselage, so act
like metal for RF purposes. As far as sailplane antennas go, the AV-22 'lollipop stick' is far too fragile; blade antenna looks prettier but the flex is probably optimal; I back up the conductive fuselage with a mesh screen inside the skin as 'belt and braces'. At 18:25 18 January 2015, Cookie wrote: Well, yes on a METAL aircraft...and maybe carbon fiber...but fiberglass...no...the L2 antenna usually goes on the inside wall of the tail boom....radio waves go through fiberglass... Cookie On Sunday, January 18, 2015 at 9:40:48 AM UTC-5, Bob Pasker wrote: I'm sure everyone knows this already, but its worthwhile saying again: transponder antennas need to go on the bottom of the aircraft so they can have line-of-sight to the radar facility, without being in the shadow of the fuselage or the wings. |
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