[Elecraft] wire for random wire antenna using kx3

Fred Jensen k6dgw at foothill.net
Tue Dec 18 14:54:53 EST 2018


Indeed.  AM broadcast vertical antennas are rarely 90 or 180 degrees, 
especially if they are a Class A station.  I think both KFI and KNX in 
Los Angeles have 195 deg verticals.  The design goal is to maximize 
field strength in the service area, accomplished by adjusting the height 
of the current maxima in the antenna element.  All resonance means is 
that the reactive component of the impedance at the feed point is zero.  
A bigger problem for stations at the low end of the band ... KFI is at 
640 KHz ... is that the usable bandwidth of the antenna can be less than 
the bandwidth of the DSB signal. [:-)  Last time I saw KFI's tower from 
Interstate 5, it appeared to have a fairly large capacity hat.

Elecraft ATU's [even the KX1 which is necessarily small with a limited 
number of L-C selections] seem to handle reactive loads just fine 
suggesting [to me at least] that designing an antenna for azimuth and/or 
elevation pattern may be more beneficial than achieving resonance in the 
desired part of the band.

73,
Fred ["Skip"] K6DGW
Sparks NV DM09dn
Washoe County

On 12/17/2018 7:45 PM, W2xj wrote:
> Coming from the broadcast side, especially AM broadcasting, I never considered resonance particularly important. Really it’s just the transmitter that cares. We always put matching at the antenna but in ham radio we usually have tuners at or in the TX.
>



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