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#1
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I am going to install a transponder in my Ventus and struggling with
the decision on where to locate the antenna. Any comments on installing the antenna on the forward portion of the glare shield...inside the cockpit? Scott |
#2
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One thing that concerns me is that the transponder frequency is
centered at 1060 MHz. A microwave oven frequency is close by, centered at 2450 MHz. The power output of a transponder is about half that of a microwave oven, but still, I don't want the transponder antenna close to my body. I'll be mounting my antenna as far back in the tail boom as I can get it. -John On Jan 16, 10:39 am, wrote: I am going to install a transponder in my Ventus and struggling with the decision on where to locate the antenna. Any comments on installing the antenna on the forward portion of the glare shield...inside the cockpit? Scott |
#3
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I followed Tom Knauff's lead with my Discus 2cT, and mounted it on the
outside, on top of the turtle deck. The fuselage is carbon fibre there, which is opaque to the radiation, shielding me, - and the antenna is not vulnerable to vagaries of landing as when mounted behind the gear doors. While this position will also shield the signal from a receiver directly below, that is not much of a concern; ATC and onboard TCAS systems in approaching commercial traffic will have a good signal. To a large extent it makes one of my concerns, - a mid-air with a jet whose pilots have their heads down on checklists and approach frequencies, much more of their concerns. BTW, I also use a Zaon PCAS on my glare shield for added protection. Like all the other pilots to whom Tom lent one last winter, I bought one. I had no idea there was so much traffic out there! |
#4
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I installed one on my Discus 2 in the factory-recommended position,
offset just behind the gear doors (the factory will send you photos if you ask). It seems to work fine there, but you have to be careful rigging and de-rigging as you can easily damage it on the trailer ramp. I know of a couple of successful installations on the upper fuselage turtle deck, where performance is also reported to be good. I would be disinclined to mount it too close to my head. Mike |
#5
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The antenna on my V2C was mounted in the factory-recommended position
that Mike mentions. It worked great and the rigging/de-rigging issue wasn't a big deal. The antenna lead will be shorter and easier to route in that position, where on the turtle neck you'll probably be hitting the cable every time you try to futz with your O2 or stow something above the wing spars. |
#6
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John
On Jan 16, 7:50 am, jcarlyle wrote: One thing that concerns me is that the transponder frequency is centered at 1060 MHz. A microwave oven frequency is close by, centered at 2450 MHz. The power output of a transponder is about half that of a microwave oven, but still, I don't want the transponder antenna close to my body. I'll be mounting my antenna as far back in the tail boom as I can get it. -John On Jan 16, 10:39 am, wrote: I am going to install a transponder in my Ventus and struggling with the decision on where to locate the antenna. Any comments on installing the antenna on the forward portion of the glare shield...inside the cockpit? Scott I'm not sure where the "about half" power ratio you mention is coming from. Radiated power specs for a microwave oven would claim something like "1,200 watts", a transponder something like "175 watts" and an (incorrect) naive ratio there is 1,200/175 = ~7%. That is wrong because the specs on radiated power for a transponder is pulse power, while that of a microwave is average power (the microwave oven may still pulse the RF signal, especially at less than full power settings). If you want to compare the two devices without worrying about the duty cycles, etc. and converting to equivalent power a simpler crude comparison would be to compare the power consumption of a microwave oven (typically ~1.5 to 2 killowatt) and the typical spec power consumption of a transponder, say ~5 watts (Becker 175 Watt mode C). The power consumption of the transponder is obviously dependent on the interrogation rate. Still instead of "half" as claimed a better simple guesstimate is a ratio of 5/2,000 = ~.2%. A better analysis of actual radiated power would show an even smaller ratio (the cavity magnetron in the microwave oven will be more efficient than the transponder at converting power into RF signal). Still I agree with not getting too close to the antenna and I would not put the antenna close to my eyes, head or other parts I care about. But "mounting as far back as I can get" may not a good optimization either. You want to avoid long cable runs and for standard quarter wave antennas you want a part of the fuselage that allows the mounting of a ground plane, i.e. a large area of the fuselage that does not have too an extreme curvature. Carbon fiber fuselages will shield the pilot very well from RF exposure but you still need a proper ground plane for the antenna, usually adhesive metal foil or aluminum sheet inside the fuselage wall and of radius at least about the length of the antenna. In a fiberglass (RF transparent) fuselage mounting the antenna inside may be a good idea, you need to avoid metal parts close to the antenna and provide a good ground plane. My general advice on these is to follow the manufactures recommendation on antenna placement, if they did not have something specific then look at what manufactures are recommending for similar gliders. Personally I'd mount the antenna below (where all manufactures recommend AFAIK) for better RF exposure to ground based radar. On my ASH-26E I have the antenna in the factory recommended location below the fuselage behind and to the side of the gear, rigging and handling are not an issue. Darryl |
#7
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The DG website has good info re the fitting of transponder
antennas to their gliders,including drawings - good for guidance. http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/index-e.html Pete |
#8
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The DG website has good info re the fitting of transponder
antennas to their gliders,including drawings - good for guidance. http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/index-e.html Pete |
#9
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On 16 jan, 16:39, wrote:
I am going to install a transponder in my Ventus and struggling with the decision on where to locate the antenna. Any comments on installing the antenna on the forward portion of the glare shield...inside the cockpit? Scott Hi, I used the shark antenne on my ventus ct. I decided to do it on top of the fuselage to avoid damage during riggin-derigging. It's installed after the doors of the engine so its 1.5 m away from me with a engine, fuselage, the wing and a fuel tank between me and the antenna Due to that i needed an 'minor change modification' at easa , that cost +/- 300 Euro It's not the most pretty solution but it's the best one If you want I can send you some pictures |
#10
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Darryl,
Thanks for the power calculation. My microwave says 350w, so I just did the 175/350 ratio. It appears I left out a few considerations...grin My glider is a fiberglass ASW-19, and Schleicher has not responded to my request for guidance on antenna installation. I did see their write- up for the ASH-26, but I want an internal installation. The DG service info note 53/04 issue 3 shows a diagram for an internal mounting, but it neglects to show the ground plane that is required with the type of antenna they use. I'm thinking of using an Advanced Aircraft Electronics L-2 transponder antenna. It's a dipole, doesn't require a ground plane, claims to have more gain than normal antennas, and can be installed by simply gluing it onto a vertical surface. One pilot I'm aware of who used the L-2 antenna made a simple stand out of 1/4" balsa wood, with a 6" vertical run and a small cruciform base. He glued the L-2 to the vertical member, and glued the cruciform base to the bottom center of his tail boom, as far back as he could reach. The cable he used was RG-213, to minimize losses. -John On Jan 17, 2:39 am, Darryl Ramm wrote: I'm not sure where the "about half" power ratio you mention is coming from. Radiated power specs for a microwave oven would claim something like "1,200 watts", a transponder something like "175 watts" and an (incorrect) naive ratio there is 1,200/175 = ~7%. That is wrong because the specs on radiated power for a transponder is pulse power, while that of a microwave is average power (the microwave oven may still pulse the RF signal, especially at less than full power settings). If you want to compare the two devices without worrying about the duty cycles, etc. and converting to equivalent power a simpler crude comparison would be to compare the power consumption of a microwave oven (typically ~1.5 to 2 killowatt) and the typical spec power consumption of a transponder, say ~5 watts (Becker 175 Watt mode C). The power consumption of the transponder is obviously dependent on the interrogation rate. Still instead of "half" as claimed a better simple guesstimate is a ratio of 5/2,000 = ~.2%. A better analysis of actual radiated power would show an even smaller ratio (the cavity magnetron in the microwave oven will be more efficient than the transponder at converting power into RF signal). Still I agree with not getting too close to the antenna and I would not put the antenna close to my eyes, head or other parts I care about. But "mounting as far back as I can get" may not a good optimization either. You want to avoid long cable runs and for standard quarter wave antennas you want a part of the fuselage that allows the mounting of a ground plane, i.e. a large area of the fuselage that does not have too an extreme curvature. Carbon fiber fuselages will shield the pilot very well from RF exposure but you still need a proper ground plane for the antenna, usually adhesive metal foil or aluminum sheet inside the fuselage wall and of radius at least about the length of the antenna. In a fiberglass (RF transparent) fuselage mounting the antenna inside may be a good idea, you need to avoid metal parts close to the antenna and provide a good ground plane. My general advice on these is to follow the manufactures recommendation on antenna placement, if they did not have something specific then look at what manufactures are recommending for similar gliders. Personally I'd mount the antenna below (where all manufactures recommend AFAIK) for better RF exposure to ground based radar. On my ASH-26E I have the antenna in the factory recommended location below the fuselage behind and to the side of the gear, rigging and handling are not an issue. Darryl |
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