[HCDX]: Cardioid Arrays
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[HCDX]: Cardioid Arrays
Hello Zacharias. Your request for information on
cardioid array antennas is one of several E-mails
I've recently received on the subject. Because of this,
I'm posting this reply to the hard-core list. I think
that several DXers will find the information useful.
You asked -
"I remember that, in a message of yours 2 years ago you
wrote on a design of a cardioid (DF) MW antenna, one of
them coming from QST ('95 issue).
I'm interested in making such an antenna. Do you know if
there is a ready drawing for this for MW (0.5-1.7 MHz )
absolutely ? I know that the QST design could be mostly
for 1.8 MHz so that modifications must be made on the L and
C components. Is there a web address for this ?"
There are several ways to generate a cardioid pattern.
Among the methods are the following:
1. Two passive or active vertical antennas (e.g. two
MFJ-1024 whips) spaced at about 50 m on the axis of the
desired peak-null line. The outputs of the two verticals
are transferred via coaxial cable to the inputs of a
phasing unit such as a Wellbrook APU 100 or a modified
MFJ-1026.
2. An active whip can be phased against a broadband loop.
The antennas may be closely spaced: these can even be on
top of a vehicle (this is what I use on beach DXpeditions).
The broadband loop I use is square and about 1.8 m per
side. The two ends of the single turn go through a 1:1
balun transformer (Mini-Circuits T1-6-X65) to go from
balanced to unbalanced. At that point it can be fed via
50 ohm coaxial cable to a low-noise amplifier of about
20 dB gain or, unamplified, straight to one of the phasing
unit's inputs. The loop head is positioned for maximum
pick-up from the desired-DX direction (such as the east).
The MFJ-1024, or similar, whip antenna output goes to the
other phasing unit input. The phasing unit is adjusted
to null stations in the direction opposite desired DX.
Wellbrook Communications offer a couple of ready-made
broadband loop designs for DXers in Europe. Contact Andy
Ikin (e-mail = " andrew.ikin@xxxxxxxxxxxx "). A workable
broadband loop, especially one that is stationary, is not
that difficult to build. If you have room for something
more than 3 m per side, especially in a high-signal area
such as Europe, you won't need to amplify it. If you
can't get the balun transformer from Mini-Circuits, you
can probably wind your own on a toroidal ferrite core or
get something like the DX One balun. Experiment with
different turns ratios to get maximum signal transfer
to a 50 ohm line.
3. In a case similar to paragraph 1, two broadband
loops can be set out at an approximate spacing of 50 m
on the desired peak-null axis. Each loop should be
positioned for maximum desired-signal pick-up.
4. Two closely-spaced broadband loops can be fed to
the phasing unit. In this case (spacing less than
30 m), one loop should be oriented for pick-up 45
clockwise of the peak-null axis and the loop should
be positioned 45 degrees anticlockwise of this axis.
5. A single properly-terminated Beverage can produce
something close to a cardioid pattern. Even better
results can be had from phasing two parallel Beverages,
spaced at about 50 to 100 m (for MW use). The feed
end of each Beverage can be presented to the phasing
unit via 4:1 or 9:1 transformers to coaxial lines.
It may help if one of the Beverages is terminated
and if the other is not. Two oppositely-oriented
Beverages have also been used with some success,
especially if both have terminations of at least
moderate effectiveness. Needless to say, Beverages
take up a lot of space, 300 m of length minimum
for decent medium-wave performance. Few people have
the kind of room at their home locations for a
proper Beverage installation. That's why serious
DXers go to far-flung locales such as Cappahayden,
Sheigra, Valhalla Beach, the Coorong, and Lemmenjoki
for those legendary loggings not possible with
ordinary antenna systems.
6. The K9AY loop is a single-antenna cardioid
pattern producer that has been used with great
success by Al Merriman, Werner Funkenhauser, Andy
Ikin, and others. It was developed by Gary Breed,
K9AY. Gary's E-mail is " editor@xxxxxxxxxxxx ".
For a better description, see Al Merriman's
write-up on Werner Funkenhauser's Web site
(" http://home.inforamp.net/~funk/termloop.html ").
Al's article refers the reader to the original
SEP 1997 and MAY 1998 QST articles (which might be
available in the periodical sections of big-city
libraries or in the hands of local ham clubs).
Gary's QST articles refer to earlier articles
on the "Ewe" antenna, a cardioid array predecessor
to the K9AY loop. The Ewe data may also be of use
to you if you can locate the QST's in which they
were published.
I hope this information has been of value to you
and that you get a suitable cardioid array antenna
system into operation.
73 / good DX ... Mark Connelly, WA1ION
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a message from WA1ION@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
to hard-core-dx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx list. To unsubscribe the list, send
"unsubscribe hard-core-dx" in mail body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
For more information, please check http://www.kotalampi.com/hard-core-dx/
or email Risto Kotalampi, risto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
------------------------------------------------------------------------