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Well I built the antenna with four conductor ribbon cable. The total
width of the cable is about 1/3 - 1/2". I would have liked it wider, but it's all I had around. The longest conductor was 21" and each one was shortened about 1/3" until the shortest one was 20 inches. Didn't have a Toroid to use for a balum, i can put that on later. We taped it to the side of the Fuselage for a test run and used a signal/field strength meter to test for output. The meter peaked around 124.75 MHZ. Hopefully this is telling me that the antenna is resonant around that frequency. The antenna was more in the horzontal than in the vertical plane. Dallas Air Park, where the airplane is parked, is about three nm from Addison airport which is tower controlled. I made a call to Addison ground control and they could hear me. WOW! Not bad for inside a hangar and a few miles away. When I get a VSWR meter I'll take a reading and really see how close I am. Thanks all for the help. Cheers Dave Jim Weir wrote: dave shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: -Thanks jim, - -Hate to keep this dragging along, but it sounds like multi conductor -ribbon wire might be the ticket for a nice wide band antenna. Don't know, never tried it. I have no idea what the characteristics of the insulator on ribbon wire is like at VHF, but I suspect it is at least acceptable, if not good. You would cut the ribbon wire on the diagonal at the far end of the dipole leaving all the conductors open, and then solder all the conductors together at the center section of the dipole leg. The diagonal should be, as I said, 20" at the short point and 21" at the long point from the center. How many conductors? Well, we like to make our antennas at least ¼" in rod diameter or ½" flat tape, so I'd say an inch or so wide with 50% wire fill and 50% insulation fill should be a decent equivalent. You **will** come back here and let us know how it went, won't you? -Do you have any suggestions for the toroid? I have lots of room for -anything I need. No suggestions for the toroid other than to go to any of the RF ferrite sources and look for something that will fit and is made of a material that is "good" (relative term) at 120-140 MHz. Micrometals mix 17 springs quickly to mind. Do NOT use the Rat Shack "alternator noise" toroid in this application, nor a toroid salvaged out of a computer power supply. They are LOUSY at VHF. Jim Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
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