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Carbon fiber vs. antennas
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January 2nd 04, 03:24 AM
Orval Fairbairn
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In article ,
(B2431) wrote:
Date: 1/1/2004 1:04 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:
On 31-Dec-2003, Jim Weir wrote:
Putting a GPS antenna UNDER a small bowl-shaped carbon fiber radome
immediately
killed any GPS signal into a 27 dB gain active antenna INCLUDING
satellites that
were directly overhead.
Yes, carbon fiber is an excellent RF absorber, particularly at GPS
frequencies.
--
-Elliott Drucker
How about at radar frequencies? Does this mean a carbon aircraft are less
visible to radar?
Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired
Nope -- carbon fiber is a conductor and behaves similarly to metal --
especially if you have parts of .25 wavelength. Remember -- Edison's
first light bulbs had graphite filaments.
Do not let carbon parts touch aluminum, as the aluminum will corrode
from electrolytic action. A carbon fiber plane will act as a ground
plane for antennae, too -- as long as you have good electrical contact
with the fibers.
Orval Fairbairn