Sujet : Re: Sleeve dipoles
De : liz (at) *nospam* poppyrecords.invalid.invalid (Liz Tuddenham)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 23. Dec 2024, 22:30:42
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Poppy Records
Message-ID : <1r51fer.435xld18vawcqN%liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : MacSOUP/2.4.6
Ralph Mowery <
rmowery42@charter.net> wrote:
In article <1r5178a.10eyjis13gf62kN%liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid>,
liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid says...
The bottom dipole half is never grounded. Another name is coaxial
antenna. Usually you find them in marine application because of
the counter poise.
Suppose the feed point had a 1:1 isolation transformer, there would be
no reason why the dipole couldn't be grounded at any point alog its
length. The same isolatio could be achieved by a quarter-wave line.
The bottom half can not be grounded no matter what except at the feed
point maybe.
I think you may have misunderstood the point I was trying to make.
Suppose, for instance, you drove the dipole from a battery-powered
transistor oscillator physically located at the centre point, there is
no reason why the bottom of the dipole could not be grounded and the
oscillator left to 'float' at about half potential.
In that case, driving the dipole from an isolation transformer would
have the same effect (if we neglect the inter-winding capacitance of a
practical transformer).
-- ~ Liz Tuddenham ~(Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply)www.poppyrecords.co.uk