[Elecraft] open wire feeders
Bill K9YEQ
k9yeq at live.com
Sat Dec 31 16:12:57 EST 2011
Ron,
Thank you for the references. I found the information very interesting to
say the least. Parts here would be an issue, but the construction and
methods to check and adjust the tuner were most valuable. Now just to have
some drawer space! As Don had mentioned in an earlier post, getting the
balanced feed line to the shack can be quite a challenge, especially for
those of us who have rebar enforce concrete with no simple method to feed
through the wall. I think even the double coax systems to be a difficulty
especially when having to drill into the side of the house and miss all the
surrounding materials, esp. the rebar. This may not be my last shack so I
have filed the project and will see what I can find for parts now before
this stuff gets extinct. That copper tubing is really becoming scarce and I
am not even sure how much copper really is in the tubing and what impact
it has on the coils if not of the same purity.
I did locate some surplus Comet vacuum capacitors in the $800+ range??!!!
73,
Bill
K9YEQ
-----Original Message-----
From: elecraft-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:elecraft-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Ron D'Eau Claire
I have often had a voltage loop at the rig end of my open wire feed line and
have never experienced a problem with stray RF, even though a neon bulb
lying near the ATU blinked as I sent CW.
HOWEVER - I do use a homebrew link-coupled ATU with open wire line. It lacks
the dual-differential tuning capacitors that Johnson used to adjust virtual
coil taps for the feed line in the Matchbox, but mine has a much wider
matching range using actual taps on the coil. (The Johnson Matchbox is only
rated to match balanced lines with impedances up to 1200 ohms).
Link coupling has a number of advantages including a high order of
suppression of stray signals since there is no direct electrical connection
between the antenna and the rig. Everything coming in (or going out) has to
pass magnetically across the link coupling and through the tuned circuit.
That's especially handy if you live near a broadcast station.
And of course, you can use the same tuner with unbalanced lines (e.g. coax).
Just connect the shield to the center of the coil and tap the center
conductor out to either side.
WZ5Q has a great example of a beautifully link coupled tuner at:
http://www.wz5q.net/index/shack_data/tuna.htm
It's bigger and neater than mine but the circuit is the same right down to
the RF current sensors.
Ron AC7AC
-----Original Message-----
If you do encounter a high impedance feedpoint on any band, that will place
a high RF voltage point at the shack end - add or subtract some feedline to
bring the feedpoint impedance down.
If you do not understand how the feedpoint impedance changes with the
length, take a look at the Antenna article on my website www.w3fpr.com
73,
Don W3FPR
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