Wednesday, February 7, 2018

A Little More Antennas 101 - Part 3

One of the conclusions I had last time was:
  • All antennas have a radiation pattern and a gain. 
They have a gain compared to something.  If you think about it, the conclusion is that antennas can be chosen for the purpose you want.  For example, there's a lot of talk in the gunny community about NVIS antennas.  NVIS is "Near Vertical Incidence Skywave", an extremely long-winded way of saying, "for local communications", and it's done in High Frequency (shortwave) bands that are usually thought of as being for long distance, while VHF/UHF is thought of as being for the local communications.  Low angles of radiation reach the ionosphere farther away than waves at higher angles or those going straight up.  If the atmosphere is dense enough, the vertical waves reflect more or less straight down, allowing communications in shorter distances than antennas radiating at low angles while the low radiation angle waves end up much farther away.  NVIS is great for getting over hills or mountains without needing directional antennas on both ends and a repeater on the mountaintop.  How do we make one?  Simply put a horizontal dipole close to the ground.

This is a plot of a computer simulation of a 7 MHz (40m) half wave dipole.  The simulation on the left is with the antenna 66' above the ground, a half wavelength.  You can see the radiation peaks are about 35 degrees above the ground.  The simulation on the right is with the antenna 1 foot above the ground and you can see the main radiation is straight up.  Instant NVIS.  Just put your antenna on the ground (or close to it - I can't tell the plots apart with the antenna 6' up).  The software, as you can read in the upper right, is the free demo version of EZNEC.  The demo version is perfectly adequate for even a few dipoles or monopoles, and is free.  Antenna modeling is a whole 'nother world that could take days to go over.


The thing is, this doesn't have to be a separate antenna, if you can raise and lower an existing dipole you can make any dipole into an NVIS antenna.  Raise and lower one with pulleys on poles?

All simulations like this are never going to be right if you have your antenna in the midst of trees, or surrounded by things like a metal roof - which is a perfect ground at frequencies where the antenna is around half the dimension (length or width) of the roof.  Fun fact: guys who study the effects of things close to the antenna say living trees are more like a person in the field than lumber.  Trees are full of water, more like people than lumber, which is dried.   

Pattern distortion is an especially big concern for vehicle-mounted antennas.  Trunk mounted antennas are very popular for mobile operating.  The roof is a better mounting spot (if you can get in your garage!).  Lots of money has been spent on simulating and measuring antenna patterns on vehicles by militaries and governments all over the world.  You may think you're getting a wonderful, clean, little doughnut pattern like theory says, but when you put it on your car, if the base of the antenna isn't several wavelengths away from metal, you probably get a lumpy, bumpy pattern with all sorts of weaker and stronger points in it.



Field from a rod antenna on the roof of a car; advertising post by EMCoS  Warmer colors (red, orange...) denote stronger fields, cool colors (green to blue) denote weaker fields.  This is actually pretty good, but the antenna is on the roof.

Finally, should you be concerned about SWR - Standing Wave Ratio (pdf warning)?  I'm of the opinion that hams worry too much about this but I also know most solid state radios reduce their output power to protect themselves from the reflected power and some shut down at lower reflected powers than others.  I have a radio with a builtin antenna tuner, and I have an external antenna tuner;  I use them without hesitation.  If my radio is happy, I'm happy.  It's true that the best place for a tuner is at the antenna, but I don't personally have the budget of an aircraft developer, all of whom build in an antenna tuner at the bottom of all their HF antennas as part of the aircraft design.  The main disadvantage of an SWR that's "too high" is that power is lost in the antenna's feed cable.

When the impedance isn't matched, some of the power delivered to the antenna reflects back to the transmitter.  Let's say 5% as a rough number.  That 5% gets back to the antenna nanoseconds later and gets reflected toward the antenna; again, let's say 5%.  That means almost all (95%) of the 5% gets added to the transmitter's signal and goes back to the antenna.  This repeats.  There's a technique called a lattice diagram that illustrates this, but the conclusion is that the only power that doesn't make it out of the antenna is the power lost in the cable.  Good quality, low-loss cable is worth it. 

Antennas can be mind-bogglingly hard to measure in the field, because of the way they interact with the everything.  Antenna design is a perfect example of the inflexibility of the laws of physics.  There's over a hundred years worth of experience with them to learn some lessons from. 


8 comments:

  1. Well done!

    I haven't done any NEC modeling, but at one time I was quite proficient in using SPLAT!, the Signal Propagation Loss And Terrain modeling program written by John Magliacane, the guy who wrote the Predict satellite tracking program for Linux.

    And NVIS is not always a solution. Several of the EMCOM groups in SoCal tried using it for their deployment drills, and it didn't work at all for them. They were always located in RF noisy environments like hospitals, and the noise pick up was horrendous. I suggested moving the HF station to a big parking lot about a half-mile away, and use either 2M simplex FM or SSB to link the two points. All I got was a deer-in-the-headlights look.

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    1. I haven't done a lot of it myself (NEC, that is). We didn't make antennas, we bought them - or the airframe manufacturers built them in. I've messed with it a little, but entirely in ham radio.

      I spent most of my analysis time for the last decade or so in Keysight/Agilent/HP Advanced Design System, or ADS. Before that, Eesof Series IV, then Touchstone. Plus SPICEs and MathCAD. Even Excel.

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  2. Same at Boeing/Sea Launch. A freq range and type was specified and bought off-the-shelf.

    I used SPLAT! for repeater and my community WiSP analysis.

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  3. I use EZNEC Pro for antenna analysis for HF and VHF antennas, as well as some Yagi analysis programs that came with the ARRL Antenna book. There are other NEC based programs (including some free ones that are very good!), but I started with the free demo version of EZNEC and figured it was worth the $150 to me to avoid spending the time to learn how to use a free program.

    NVIS is not always the solution to emergency communication problems, but as long as the FoF2 stays above your operating frequency, it is a workable option. I wrote a series of articles on NVIS, the first of which is linked here-
    https://brushbeater.wordpress.com/2016/08/15/nvis-explained-i/

    I've got some more information here-
    https://keypounderspad.wordpress.com/nvis-near-vertical-incidence-skywave-resources/

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    1. I'm still hedging on upgrading from EZNec demo to the full-up versions. There's something I'd like to look at doing, but aside from that one project, I really don't do much with antennas. I probably need to just bite the bullet and do it. I've just about used up all of the space in my yard.

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    2. 4NEC2 offers the same sort of user convenience that EZNec does, but it's free. The download comes with lots of geometry files to use for practice. And there are converters that convert EZNec files to the more standard NECx files that 4NEC2 uses.

      I did a lot of modeling with NEC (2, 3, and 4) and a commerical equivalent, WIRA (at TCI). It should be noted, if you give any of them a "good" input file, they will give you an output. It's up to you to know which outputs are reliable, and which are garbage. That just takes some practice, and some understanding.

      Chris

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    3. FWIW, not too long after this post two years ago, I went ahead and bought EZNEC. I looked at 4NEC2, probably still have it on this machine, and just thought the price for EZNEC was fair.

      It should be noted, if you give any of them a "good" input file, they will give you an output. It's up to you to know which outputs are reliable, and which are garbage. That just takes some practice, and some understanding.

      That's the pattern common in everything from pure math programs to weather forecasting to climate modeling to, well, everything modeling is used for. Garbage in gospel out.

      I think if more people could see what their antenna patterns look like with houses, trees, cars and everything else in the near field, it would change a lot of ideas.

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    4. I wonder if anybody has modeling that good?

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