[Antennas] Unused resonant antennas - shorted to ground or floating?
C.Whitaker
whitaker at pa.net
Thu Dec 24 22:24:19 EST 2009
de WB2CPN
Everything is somewhat resonant at one frequency or another.
List includes folk guitars, planets in orbit, and wires that could
be used as an antenna. The trick is to make an unused wire,
either horzontal or vertical, which is in your antenna farm, to be:
(1) Grounded to prevent static change build up, and (2) Grounded
in such as way as to cause its new resonant frequency to not be
a frequency that you do have antennas for. Shorted to ground
via a capacitor is out, no Ohmic continuity. So, shorted to ground
via an inductance is the way to go. If you leave it open, or shorted
with a fairly high resistance, the wire becomes resonant at its
natural half wave frequency. The resistance short will help with
the buildup of a static charge, but you still have no control over the
natural resonant frequency. I wonder what FCC says about
the treatment of the vertical towers that are used for emergency
restoration should their main tower fail. I would expect that if
the main tower is 90 degrees tall, you wouldn't want a smaller
tower sitting nearby and resonant on the same frequency.
Any ideas?
73 Clete
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