Please contact me off-list regarding a possible 75m version.

 

From: BVARC [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bill Crowell via
BVARC
Sent: Tuesday, August 25, 2015 13:32
To: BRAZOS VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB <[email protected]>
Cc: Bill Crowell <[email protected]>; Gary Sitton <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [BVARC] TTFD Antennas - N4HPG

 

Hi Gary,

 

I did a reply-all so I could answer for the rest of the group.

 

For 40m and up, the antenna is 45' long.

 

There's no need for a tuner in almost all instances. The 50-ohm impedance
from the rig is transferred through the 50-ohm coax to the "balun" that is
mounted on the wall, tree or other support. Inside, it is matched to 75 ohms
using a TLT 1.56:1 UNUN. I've attached the UNUN picture with it in the test
fixture. The blue wire is the "bootstrap" winding and goes to ground. The
50-ohm side is in the middle with the red wire connecting to the blue
windings. The other end of the red wire is the 75 ohm side.

 

This is the same configuration as figure 7-8 in Sevick's book. A quintufilar
winding.

 

Because I wound this with flexible wire, there was no need to wrap 5 wires
and re-solder them. The core is u290 material.

 

I used this fixture to test the frequency response with 5w from my TS-940s.
<grin> 75 ohm load.

 

The remaining part of the circuit is virtually identical to this fellows 9:1
Guanella:

 

http://www.qsl.net/kh6grt/page4/balun/balun.htm

 

So, we end up with 50-75-600 ohms. The feed line is 600 ohms as is the
antenna. The resistor is in a 1.5" pvc tube about 6" long.

 

No tuner needed. That's the point!

 

VY 73!

 

 

Bill Crowell

Pearland, TX

 

From: BVARC <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > on
behalf of Gary Sitton via BVARC <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Reply-To: BRAZOS VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Date: Tuesday, August 25, 2015 at 1:02 PM
To: BRAZOS VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: Gary Sitton <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [BVARC] TTFD Antennas - N4HPG

 

I would be interested in 40 M and up and I
have and use a Johnson KW MatchBox.   I
believe that would help tune this antenna.

Gary


On 8/25/2015 12:36, Scott Royall via BVARC wrote:

I might be interested, depending on physical dimensions.

 

From: BVARC [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bill Crowell via
BVARC
Sent: Tuesday, August 25, 2015 10:51
To: Bill Crowell via BVARC  <mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Cc: Bill Crowell  <mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Subject: [BVARC] TTFD Antennas - N4HPG

 

Howdy All,

 

I was listening to the net last night and John, K5IZO, was encouraging folks
to get on 75m. Yay!

 

I've been working on a project for a number of months. Some of you know that
I use a TTFD antenna. TTFD or T2FD. It stands for Tilted Terminated Folded
Dipole. This antenna is not widely known because it's not featured in any
ARRL publications - at least since 1949. There are some good reference
sources such as the RSGB wire antenna book. There are also some detractors
that don't understand the theory of operation.

 

Here's a link to the original article:

 

http://www.scribd.com/doc/42625655/An-Experimental-All-Band-Nondirectional-T
ransmitting-Antenna-T2FD

 

You'll notice that the antenna is a 600-ohm design. It is a balanced
antenna.

 

Perhaps Rick Hiller and I should give a presentation on it.

 

I've been using the B&W version for a number of  years, but want to run
higher power. That means a better matching transformer for 50:600 ohms and
also a more robust terminating resistor. The antenna works well from 75 to
10m with 1.5:1 SWR or better on all bands. This is because it's a traveling
wave antenna. Mismatch is soaked up by the terminating resistor. No tuner is
needed. The antenna works from the lowest frequency up. That means a 80m
antenna works on all bands from 80-10m. A shorter antenna works from 40-10m.
B&W says 6m, but I've not tested my high-power balun for 6m yet. I never
promise what I haven't tested.

 

I'm hoping to bring a completed unit of the high-power design to the club
meeting on 9/10 so y'all can look at it. I should probably fire up N4HPG.com
website and post some pictures.

 

If you can have only 1 antenna, this is the one to have. I like to hunt DX
and change bands without having to tune. Get as long an antenna as possible!

 


  _____  


 

The folks at B&W now want $825 for their version. That's insane! But they
sell mostly to military and governments.

 

I'm making one antenna for myself that will be all my build. I'm also making
a heavy-duty one for N5XZ. Being gainfully unemployed and having a workshop,
I'm testing the waters to see if others might want one.

 

When we put up an antenna, the neighbors usually notice. I'm making my
version with 14awg white MTW wire and clear, acrylic spacers for the antenna
and the ladder line. The balun box mounts on the wall and transforms the 50
ohm unbalanced to 600 ohm balanced. It's a 6x6x4 box because there are 4
toroids.

 

Based upon present materials, I believe I can produce the standard antenna -
1kW for normal operation for $349. I'm still working on the N5XZ 1.5kW RTTY
Contesting version that will be a bit more.

 

If you want to build your own, feel free to steal my design!

 

For those who would like a built and tested unit, let me know. I'm trying to
decide if I should get into the antenna business.

 

73!

 

N4HPG

 

Bill Crowell

Pearland, TX






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