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Collapsible Beam for 6 m Steve Kavanagh VE3SMA OVHFA “Do”, Sept. 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "Collapsible Beam for 6 m Steve Kavanagh VE3SMA OVHFA “Do”, Sept. 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Collapsible Beam for 6 m Steve Kavanagh VE3SMA OVHFA “Do”, Sept. 2009

2 Idea for Foldable 6 m Beam Foldable dipole for 6 m used in my VHF contest rover operations for a few years – takes just a few seconds to unfold or fold up again for transport/storage Could use similar construction to make a folding framework to support a wire beam Similar antennas used by others, with bent parasitic elements made from wire – Penn. State 40 m beam [1] – DJ4SA Spiderbeam (multiband HF antenna) [2]

3 Spiderbeam

4 Geometry of 4NEC2 Model

5 Predicted VSWR (@ 25  )

6 Predicted Gain

7 Predicted F/B,F/R Ratios

8 Modeling Observations Could optimize element lengths for different combinations of gain and bandwidth More gain = less bandwidth = lower input impedance As expected from regular Yagi behaviour

9 End Loop Compensation With wire elements held with string, you need loops at ends to tie string to These loops add capacitance to the element ends To maintain correct resonant frequency need to shorten elements to compensate I made some 4NEC2 models to predict the required shortening – not quite sure if correct but included in the actual antenna

10 Feeding the Antenna Spiderbeam has 50 ohm input impedance I chose a higher gain design with lower input impedance as only a narrow slice of 6m needs to be covered How to feed a balanced antenna with ~25 ohm impedance using 50 ohm unbalanced cable ?

11 Feed Network Balun – Two large ferrite beads are slipped over the coax to make a “choke” or “W2DU-type” balun Matching network – can be thought of as two quarter-wave transformers in series

12 Feed Network, cont’d BUT…you can’t get 70.7 ohm cable ! By adjusting lengths of the two transformer sections, – can perfectly match a range of impedances – and can use standard 75 ohm cable

13 Here it is !

14 On-the-Air Results My 1 st double hop Es QSO to the west from home – DM09 – With about 10 Watts – Using antenna tuner to match before building matching network 1 st QSO on Field Day was NP4A on 6m – With 5 Watts – Much better at 12’ than vertical on car on VE3UBL beacon and on a VE9 on sporadic E – Good F/B ratio observed Used for CW WW VHF Contest from FN05 (Multi-Op) – Satisfactory results – 41 grids worked with 100 Watts – Balun withstood this power – Significantly better than dipole (much better than vertical on car) on VE3UBL beacon

15 References [1] Nathan A. Miller, NW3Z, and James L. Breakall, WA3FET, “A 40m V-Yagi”, in International Antenna Collection, RSGB/ARRL, 2003, (and in QST,May 1988) [2] http://www.spiderbeam.com


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