[Elecraft] EFHW
Walter Underwood
wunder at wunderwood.org
Sat Feb 11 16:22:26 EST 2017
Correct.
Fan dipoles work because the resonant 1/4-wave elements are lower impedance than the non-resonant elements, so they get the majority of the power. A neat trick, really.
The LNR End-Fedz antennas use traps. They appear to work just fine.
wunder
K6WRU
Walter Underwood
CM87wj
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)
> On Feb 11, 2017, at 12:50 PM, K9MA <k9ma at sdellington.us> wrote:
>
> On 2/11/2017 13:03, Brian Pietrzyk wrote:
>> Now comes the fantasy thinking... What about making it an end fed multi band by either putting traps in the 80m end fed or better still adding on a couple of fan EFHW wires for 40 and 20? Anyone tried this? How would the efficiencies compare to their centre fed trap or fan dipole counterparts respectively?
>
> That won't work, because the shorter wires will present a much lower impedance, and essentially short out the half wave wire. The whole idea of the EFHW is that the high feedpoint impedance reduces ground system current to practically zero.
>
> A trap might work, but might not be compatible with keeping the antenna very light. A QRP trap could be pretty small, I suppose, but it still might be hard to support the wire with the extra weight on it using a lightweight pole.
>
> However, an EFHW will work on harmonics, though the pattern changes. A 40 meter half wave works quite well on 20, but I'm not sure an 80 meter half wave would be all that great on 20, especially with a single support. The free space patterns of long wire antennas are shown in the ARRL Antenna Book. As frequency goes up, more lobes appear in the pattern, and the main ones get closer to the axis of the wire. For example, a full wave antenna has a cloverleaf pattern, the lobes about 55 degrees from the wire axis, with nulls broadside. For a 2 wavelength wire, there are 8 lobes, the main ones 35 degrees from the wire axis. These patterns will, of course, be modified by the effects of ground and the fact that the wire probably won't be straight, but the free space patterns give some idea of how the antenna will radiate. Modeling these antennas is very easy, and gives much more accurate results.
>
> Note that the pattern of an EFHW (full wave, etc.) is NOT the same as that of a center fed dipole operated at even harmonics.
>
> 73,
>
> Scott K9MA
>
>
> --
> Scott K9MA
>
> k9ma at sdellington.us
>
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