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#1
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I just bought a fiberglass homebuilt project with a conventional com
antenna mounted inside the leading edge of the vertical stab but it doesn't have a ground plane yet. The instructions call for a 24in by 24in ground plane but there isn't that much room right there at the base of the tail. Any suggestions as to what would work well? I imagine there is info out there somewhere but am not sure where to start looking. many thanks, steve |
#2
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If you have the room, make a vertical dipole. The bottom of the ground
plane will replace the horizontal surface. For the bottom, use a 24" aluminum pipe. Connect the shield to the bottom pipe and run the coax down the center of the pipe. It is better if the coax is centered. That is all you need to do. Total length will be 48" plus the spacing of the center insulator. Colin |
#3
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COLIN LAMB wrote:
If you have the room, make a vertical dipole. The bottom of the ground plane will replace the horizontal surface. For the bottom, use a 24" aluminum pipe. Connect the shield to the bottom pipe and run the coax down the center of the pipe. It is better if the coax is centered. That is all you need to do. Total length will be 48" plus the spacing of the center insulator. In my Minicab i don't have the place for a full straight dipole. I just bend the lower wire and all fit inside the fuselage. I works fine with a Becker radio. By -- Pub: http://www.slowfood.fr/france Philippe Vessaire Ò¿Ó¬ |
#4
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... I just bought a fiberglass homebuilt project with a conventional com antenna mounted inside the leading edge of the vertical stab but it doesn't have a ground plane yet. The instructions call for a 24in by 24in ground plane but there isn't that much room right there at the base of the tail. Any suggestions as to what would work well? I imagine there is info out there somewhere but am not sure where to start looking. many thanks, steve Take a look at the flexible dipole antennas he http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page14.htm Composite sailplanes have the same problem of no ground planes and restricted space. Bill Daniels |
#5
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... I just bought a fiberglass homebuilt project with a conventional com antenna What is a "conventional com antenna"? mounted inside the leading edge of the vertical stab but it doesn't have a ground plane yet. If it is installed in the leading edge of the vertical stabilizer, how do you intend to get a 24" length of conductor forward out into the slipstream? The instructions call for a 24in by 24in ground plane but there isn't that much room right there at the base of the tail. Any suggestions as to what would work well? Until you answer the above two questions, I can't offer suggestions. Jim |
#6
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On Wed, 2 Nov 2005 08:59:35 -0800, "RST Engineering"
wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I just bought a fiberglass homebuilt project with a conventional com antenna What is a "conventional com antenna"? mounted inside the leading edge of the vertical stab but it doesn't have a ground plane yet. If it is installed in the leading edge of the vertical stabilizer, how do you intend to get a 24" length of conductor forward out into the slipstream? The instructions call for a 24in by 24in ground plane but there isn't that much room right there at the base of the tail. Any suggestions as to what would work well? Until you answer the above two questions, I can't offer suggestions. Jim read it again jim. inside the leading edge of the vertical stab ...like up inside it. probably radio transparent fibreglass construction how do you build a groundplane inside of the tailcone below it? seems a reasonable post to me. Stealth Pilot |
#7
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I *did* read it again. A "conventional com antenna" could mean anything
from a store-bought white fiberglass whip to a store-bought dipole to a store-bought damn near anything. And how FAR up the leading edge of the vertical stabilizer? Base right at the fuselage junction? Six inches up? A foot up? I understand radio transparent fiberglass. I don't understand the configuration, and to simply spout "supposes" isn't a real good way to get decent performance. Jim read it again jim. inside the leading edge of the vertical stab ...like up inside it. probably radio transparent fibreglass construction how do you build a groundplane inside of the tailcone below it? |
#8
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A "conventional com antenna" could mean anything ...
Come on Jim. Most of us understood it to mean a regular 1/4 wave that is used for metal airplanes with their "ground plane". You are technically too correct sometimes. There are all sorts of conventions addapted from coloqua. For example "conventionaly" you know who Americans are. But America is a continent and not a country. |
#9
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On Thu, 3 Nov 2005 08:27:50 -0800, "RST Engineering"
wrote: I *did* read it again. A "conventional com antenna" could mean anything from a store-bought white fiberglass whip to a store-bought dipole to a store-bought damn near anything. And how FAR up the leading edge of the vertical stabilizer? Base right at the fuselage junction? Six inches up? A foot up? I understand radio transparent fiberglass. I don't understand the configuration, and to simply spout "supposes" isn't a real good way to get decent performance. Jim I wonder about something else. How long would a "full wave" antenna have to be for aviation comm radios? I've got some old walkie talkies that have those very long pull out antenna's, they must be 5 or 6 feet. Are those full wave? And do full wave antenna's get the best possible reception? Of course, in an airplane, the space limitation is the problem. I use a di-pole in the vertical stab of my Glasair. If you use a 1/4 wave antenna, and since it's 1/4 the size of the radio wave, does that mean you will only get 1/4 of the strength that is available in a certain location? |
#10
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A full wave antenna wound not be what you normally want. A 1/4 wave antenna
gives you a good omnidirectional pattern, with limited nulls off the end. If you installed a full wave vertical ground plane on an aircraft, it would have a bit of gain - up. Remember that gain is not free. It is realized taking the energy from one direction and increasing it in another. Which direction are you going to take it from? Easy when you are at a fixed location. Not so easy when you are flying around in an aircraft. What you hope to accomplish in a good installation is th make sure all the connectors are installed properly, the coax is good and the antenna is tuned for the proper frequency. Regarding the ground plane, sometimes you have to do the best you can. If there is not enough vertical room for a dipole or a ground plane, you could install a 24" wire vertically in the vertical tail and then install a single 24" wire in the horizontal axis, also in the vertical tail. That will not be perfect, but sometimes you have to live with less. You could also have one vertical wire and three horizontal wires, serving as the ground plane, with one in the vertical tail and two in the horizontal tail. Colin |
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