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Antennas general

 
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frank.hinde(at)hp.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 26, 2006 9:02 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

On my Vans kit they provided a wingtip NAV antenna which is just a
strip of copper foil. Do not suggest how one is supposed to ground it to
the airframe.

I assume one has to ground the coax braid to the wing somehow??

Also I intend to run my marker beacon antenna (40" lentgh of stripped
coax) in the bottom of my cowl. Assuming this will work do I need to
bond that coax to the firewall or similar?

Thanks

Frank

Rv 7a...Finishing..No really I am finishing..Smile


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recapen(at)earthlink.net
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 26, 2006 10:20 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

Frank,

For the wingtip NAV, IIRC the coax shield is to be grounded with the shield approx where it ends and the foil begins.

For my marker beacon, I am using bulkhead fittings to penetrate the firewall so I am considering mine grounded to the SSFirewall.

I'm gonna use the 40" stripped coax on the bottom of my cowl too - along with another stripped length (gotta figure out the math) for my AM/FM/MP3 player.

When you're really finished and flying - come visit N06 Laurel, DE....

Ralph

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frank.hinde(at)hp.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 26, 2006 10:59 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

Now there is an idea...I just passed my RG56 thru a grommet in the
firewall but a bulkhead fitting would take care of the grounding...I
have not fire sealed it yet so I might do the same thing...assuming
Radio Shack sells the fittings of course.

Thanks Ralph

Frank

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brian



Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 643
Location: Sacramento, California, USA

PostPosted: Wed Jul 26, 2006 12:10 pm    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

On Jul 26, 2006, at 12:58 PM, Hinde, Frank George (Corvallis) wrote:

Quote:

(Corvallis)" <frank.hinde(at)hp.com>

On my Vans kit they provided a wingtip NAV antenna which is just a
strip of copper foil. Do not suggest how one is supposed to ground
it to
the airframe.

I assume one has to ground the coax braid to the wing somehow??

Also I intend to run my marker beacon antenna (40" lentgh of stripped
coax) in the bottom of my cowl. Assuming this will work do I need to
bond that coax to the firewall or similar?

Not really. A 50W transmitter shooting its signal at you using a
directional antenna when you are less than 2000' away does not
require much from the receiver and its antenna. The signal level is
so high that making a perfect antenna is not necessary.

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 26, 2006 2:26 pm    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

They might - but digi-key does for sure.......

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europa flugzeug fabrik



Joined: 13 Feb 2006
Posts: 65
Location: North Coast, USA

PostPosted: Wed Jul 26, 2006 3:58 pm    Post subject: Re: Antennas general Reply with quote

brian wrote:
A 50W transmitter shooting its signal at you using a directional antenna when you are less than 2000' away does not require much from the receiver and its antenna.

I believe they’re as little as 2.5W, though as highly directional, the moral equivalent of higher power relative to like a COM. Perhaps you are referring to that.

Also, the sensitivity of the receiver isn’t good, maybe 200 times less sensitive than a COM. So, the antenna has to be reasonably good. I wonder if we could use wire or copper tape to fake an equivalent of a sled antenna. One end to shield, center wire about 10” down or wherever, but we need a ramp tester to tune it. Or rig it up in the car, and find a marker shed we can drive up close to. A coax monopole w/o ground plane as proposed will probably be OK.

Fred F.


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nuckollsr(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:03 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

At 04:58 PM 7/26/2006 -0700, you wrote:

Quote:

<n3eu(at)comcast.net>
brian wrote:
> A 50W transmitter shooting its signal at you using a directional
antenna when you are less than 2000' away does not require much from the
receiver and its antenna.

I believe they’re as little as 2.5W, though as highly directional, the
moral equivalent of higher power relative to like a COM. Perhaps you are
referring to that.

Also, the sensitivity of the receiver isn’t good, maybe 200 times less
sensitive than a COM. So, the antenna has to be reasonably good. I
wonder if we could use wire or copper tape to fake an equivalent of a sled
antenna. One end to shield, center wire about 10” down or wherever, but
we need a ramp tester to tune it. Or rig it up in the car, and find a
marker shed we can drive up close to. A coax monopole w/o ground plane as
proposed will probably be OK.

Fred F.

Lets put some rough orders of magnitude numbers to
this discussion. Assuming 2.5 W transmitter driving
a corner reflector (lets assume 3db gain) for an
ERP of 5 watts, let's plug into:

http://www.megalithia.com/elect/fieldstr.html

With an ERP of .005 Kw and distance of .2 KM.
Leave the channel defaulted at CH44.

This calculator is for UHF frequencies the the
performance at 75 MHz would be only slightly different
due to tiny differences in path losses.

The calculator says we can expect a field strength
on the order of 80 dBuV at .2 Km above this marker
site.

Go to:

http://www.radioing.com/eengineer/rfcalc.html

and enter 80 (dBuV) before punching the box in the lower
right column for DbUv -> Volts conversion and we get:

0.01 volts, or 10,000 microvolts.

Marker beacon receiver sensitivity is on the order of
1500 uV in the LO SENS position and 200 uV in the
HI SENS position. So barring errors in data or logic
it seems that there's a LOT of head-roon for loss of
antenna efficiency.

I've had a number of builders in glass/epoxy airplanes
simply lay a 40" piece of wire out in the tailcone
and run a coax to the marker receiver report excellent
results.

But the bottom line is that what ever one installs that
departs from the installation instructions (hence departures
from the manufacturer's expectations) the installation should
be flight checked by overflying a marker beacon facility
at various altitudes. Returning to

http://www.megalithia.com/elect/fieldstr.html

Enter 1.5 KM into the distance box (5x higher than anything
we would expect to do in a real approach) and we get
62 dBuV field strength. Which converts to a potential
signal level of 1200 uV to a receiver in an IDEAL installation.

Hmmmm . . . one would probably not expect even the best of
installations to function at 5,000 AGL in LO sensitivity but
it should come back alive when you select the HI sensitivity.

A little bit of flight testing is all it takes to see how much
headroom your installation possesses. Data-in-hand trumps
un-quantified supposition every time. The above exercise suggests
that considerable degradation of gross antenna performance is
tolerable and worthy of further exploration.

Bob . . .


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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:34 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

While we're discussing dB's, I note that the installation instructions for my Garmin GMA 340 audio panel mention several times a feature provinding "10 times gain (20 dB)" for the entertainment channel input.  I have labored all my life under the impression that 10dB was 10x gain, and 20 dB was 100x gain.  It seems unlikely that the people who design this stuff professionally know more about decibels and power gain than a radio hobbyist does, so it's safe to assume I'm the one who is missing something.  What gives?
 
Sorry to hijack an antenna thread for this, Bob.  But I've just got to get this straight before I go nuts Wink
 
-Bill B 
 
 
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Hopperdhh(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:52 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

In a message dated 7/27/2006 9:39:55 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, sportav8r(at)aol.com writes:
Quote:
While we're discussing dB's, I note that the installation instructions for my Garmin GMA 340 audio panel mention several times a feature provinding "10 times gain (20 dB)" for the entertainment channel input.  I have labored all my life under the impression that 10dB was 10x gain, and 20 dB was 100x gain.  It seems unlikely that the people who design this stuff professionally know more about decibels and power gain than a radio hobbyist does, so it's safe to assume I'm the one who is missing something.  What gives?
 
Sorry to hijack an antenna thread for this, Bob.  But I've just got to get this straight before I go nuts Wink
 
-Bill B 
 


Bill,
 
You are correct for POWER gain.  For VOLTAGE gain Garmin is right.
 
Db=10 log (P1/P2)
 
Db=20 log (V1/V2)
 
Dan Hopper
K9WEK
RV-7A


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nuckollsr(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 8:37 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

At 09:58 AM 7/26/2006 -0700, you wrote:

Quote:

<frank.hinde(at)hp.com>

On my Vans kit they provided a wingtip NAV antenna which is just a
strip of copper foil. Do not suggest how one is supposed to ground it to
the airframe.

I assume one has to ground the coax braid to the wing somehow??

How is the foil installed? Does it begin right at the edge of
the tip fairing such that transition from coax to antenna is
closely located to metallic portions of the wing? If so, ground
the coax shield to the nearest practical wing-metal.
Quote:
Also I intend to run my marker beacon antenna (40" lentgh of stripped
coax) in the bottom of my cowl. Assuming this will work do I need to
bond that coax to the firewall or similar?

Here's where having access to a piece of test equipment is
a real help! An MFJ-259 antenna analyzer (See:

http://www.mfjenterprises.com/products.php?prodid=MFJ-259B )

would allow you to run say 10" of straight wire, coil 20"
or so around a piece of plastic or wooden dowel, then extend
the remainder out straight for an overall length of 20"
or so. Then use the antenna analyzer to look at the characteristics
of this shortened antenna. You'll find that it resonates lower
than 75 Mhz. Trim the 10" extension beyond the coil to bring
the antenna up to 75 Mhz then glass over what remains.

Bob . . .


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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 11:25 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

Aw, shoot!  Make that P=E^2/R.  I knew better than that.  Hit "send" too quickly.
 
-Stormy 
 
 
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 11:25 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

Ah, the old P=E^2*R ploy.   I see now.  Thanks. 
 
 
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Dale Ensing



Joined: 11 Jan 2006
Posts: 571
Location: Aero Plantation Weddington NC

PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 3:42 pm    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

Are you sure it is not E=mc2    ;<)
Quote:


Aw, shoot!  Make that P=E^2/R.  I knew better than that.  Hit "send" too quickly.
 
-Stormy 
 
 
DO NOT ARCHIEVE


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PostPosted: Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:35 pm    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

Dale, you may have something there... ask the patent office Wink
 
do not archive 
 
 
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brian



Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 643
Location: Sacramento, California, USA

PostPosted: Fri Jul 28, 2006 5:00 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

On Jul 27, 2006, at 9:28 AM, sportav8r(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:
While we're discussing dB's, I note that the installation
instructions for my Garmin GMA 340 audio panel mention several
times a feature provinding "10 times gain (20 dB)" for the
entertainment channel input. I have labored all my life under the
impression that 10dB was 10x gain, and 20 dB was 100x gain. It
seems unlikely that the people who design this stuff professionally
know more about decibels and power gain than a radio hobbyist does,
so it's safe to assume I'm the one who is missing something. What
gives?

10dB is a ten-fold increase in *power*.

Since power is V^2/R if you increase voltage by a factor of 10 you
increase power by a factor of 100 (10x10). A 100-fold increase in
power is 20dB.

A gain of 10 (voltage increased ten times) results in a power gain of
20dB.

Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak AT lloyd DOT com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


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Brian Lloyd
brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 28, 2006 11:08 am    Post subject: Antennas general Reply with quote

NOT RV Related

Just as a point of intrest, if you want V˛2/R, turn Number Lock on, hold
down Alt key and type 0178 on the Number Pad. When you release the Alt key
the ˛ pops up. Degrees (X°) is 0176 and (Xł) is 0179. This is done through
Charicter Map and there are many more. Check it out in System Tools. It is
an automatic install for Windows XP but you might have to install it in
98/SE. Its on the Windows Disk.

John D.

Do Not Archive
Quote:
Since power is V^2/R if you increase voltage by a factor of 10 you
increase power by a factor of 100 (10x10). A 100-fold increase in power
is 20dB.


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