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S o u t h e r n M a r y l a n d A m a t e u r R a d i o C l u b W3SMR 147.150 443.600 SMARC Volume 44 - Issue 4 April 2018 Sparks A Little Something For Everyone April SMARC Meeting Location: District 5, Prince George’s County Police Station 6707 Groveton Drive, Clinton, MD 20735 Date: April 13, 2018 Time: General Meeting - 7:00 PM Board Meeting - if necessary Talk-in: VHF Repeater - 147.150 - PL114.8 (click for map) President’s Shack By Ken, KA3ZPA Hello all SMARC members. Our April meeting is just around the corner. I don’t think we have much planned, so maybe this would be a good time to put our thinking caps on and see what we would like to cover this year. Some program ideas Information Board Meeting: As needed Membership Meeting: Second Friday, 1900 hours of the even months of the year. VHF Repeater: W3SMR/R 147.150 (PL 114.8) UHF Repeater: WA3YUV/R 443.600 (PL 103.5) 2 Meter Net: None at this time. 10 Meter Net: None at this time. Web Site: http://www.qsl.net/smarc Webmaster - N3MPS Mailing Address: P.O. Box 273 Cheltenham, MD 20623 Input for this newsletter may be sent to the editor Ken LaCapria. [email protected] Newsletter Submissions SMARC Officers and Board President: KA3ZPA Allen Stevenson Vice President: KA3POX Ken LaCapria Secretary: WB6NCO Ed Zumstein Treasurer: WA3YUV Vic Curtis Activities Managers: Vacant Directors: N3HBS Tommy Lloyd N3MPS Jack Van Gilder and meeting thoughts. I look forward to seeing everyone at the meeting and at the very least maybe we can do a dance for some hot weather. KA3ZPA ALLEN VE Testing Fort Washington Hospital FWARC For dates and times, http://www.fwarc.net/ Waldorf West Library CCARC For dates and times, www.k3smd.org Buy, Sell, Trade If you have treasures you would like to sell, buy or trade, list them here. Send your want ad to the editor Ken LaCapria. [email protected] Pictures of your items available are welcome.

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Southern Maryland

A

mateur Radio C

lub

W3SMR

147.150443.600

SMARC Volume 44 - Issue 4April 2018

SparksA Little

Something For

Everyone

April SMARC MeetingLocation: District 5, Prince George’s County Police Station 6707 Groveton Drive, Clinton, MD 20735Date: April 13, 2018Time: General Meeting - 7:00 PM Board Meeting - if necessaryTalk-in: VHF Repeater - 147.150 - PL114.8

(click for map)

President’s ShackBy Ken, KA3ZPA

Hello all SMARC members. Our April meeting is just around the corner. I don’t think we have much planned, so maybe this would be a good time to put our thinking caps on and see what we would like to cover this year. Some program ideas

InformationBoard Meeting:

As neededMembership Meeting:

Second Friday, 1900 hours of the even months of the year.

VHF Repeater: W3SMR/R147.150 (PL 114.8)

UHF Repeater: WA3YUV/R443.600 (PL 103.5)

2 Meter Net:None at this time.

10 Meter Net:None at this time.

Web Site:http://www.qsl.net/smarcWebmaster - N3MPS

Mailing Address:P.O. Box 273Cheltenham, MD 20623

Input for this newsletter may be sent to the editor Ken LaCapria. [email protected]

Newsletter Submissions

SMARC Officers and BoardPresident:KA3ZPA Allen Stevenson

Vice President:KA3POX Ken LaCapria

Secretary:WB6NCO Ed Zumstein

Treasurer:WA3YUV Vic Curtis

Activities Managers:Vacant

Directors:N3HBS Tommy LloydN3MPS Jack Van Gilder

and meeting thoughts. I look forward to seeing everyone at the meeting and at the very least maybe we can do a dance for some hot weather.

KA3ZPAALLEN

VE TestingFort Washington HospitalFWARCFor dates and times,http://www.fwarc.net/

Waldorf West LibraryCCARCFor dates and times,www.k3smd.org

Buy, Sell, TradeIf you have

treasures you would like to sell, buy or trade, list

them here.

Send your want ad to the editor Ken LaCapria. [email protected] Pictures of your items available are welcome.

SMARC Sparks - PAGE 2

June 3, 2018Manassas Hamfest & Maker Technology ShowOle Virginia Hams Amateur Radio ClubManassas, VAhttp://manassashamfest.org

June 17, 2018BARC Father’s Day HamfestBaltimore Amateur Radio ClubUpperco, MDhttp://www.w3ft.com

May 5, 2018The Greater Hagerstown HamfestAntietam Radio AssociationHagerstown, MDhttp://www.w3cwc.org/Menu/Hagerstown-Hamfest

May 27, 2018Memorial Day HamfestMaryland FM AssociationWest Friendship, MDhttp://www.marylandfm.org

August 5, 201867th Annual Berryville HamfestShenandoah Valley Amateur Radio ClubBerryville, VAhttp://www/shenvalarc.org/hamfest

October 7, 2018CARAFestMaryland State ConventionColumbia Amateur Radio AssociationWest Friendship, MDhttp://carafest.org

Hamfest Schedule

Support your local Ham Radio clubs by attending their Hamfests and participating in

the contests they sponsor. Keep Ham Radio Alive!!

December 8, 2018American Legion PGCERA SantaFestAmerican Legion & Prince George’s County Emergency Repeater AssociationCheltenham, MDhttp://pgares.org/santafest/index.html

Silent KeysWillard Harris, KA3IDZJohn Swain, KA3UWDHank Mason, W3FVDFrosty, W3PTEleanor Sartori, KA3RCXWillie, W1ZXJim Blume, N3ASTWes Clopton, W3ERURube Chernikoff, WK3VJerry Bricker, N3IOULee Mann, KF3TJerry Hilwig, N3BSIGould Turney, KA3DUERoy, K3RHLBill Faust, K3CHJoe DeVine, KB3BBXBob Price, KX3CEd Pace, N3HJADave Rigor, KA3JQNGeorge Dewees, KA3KIFRoberta Roberts, N3IARMike Krakowsky, N3HIZHarry Liller, KB3HNQSam Sullivan, N3GHYLash Mann, N3FUZRick Creager, KK4GVGordon Cameron, KA3MWNBilly Sheriff, KB3WJOClaire Kennedy, W3MNUBill Lasner, W3SQG

Groovy LinksARRL Amateur Radio Club Locator:http://www.arrl.org/FandES/field/club/clubsearch.phtml

ARRLhttp://www.arrl.org

Fort Washington Amateur Radio Clubhttp://www.fwarc.net/

Maryland Mobileers Amateur Radio Clubhttp://www.mobileers.org/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=1

Find the transmitter location of broadcast AM, FM and TV stations.http://www.fcc.gov/mb/audio/fmq.html

Anderson Power Products (Power Pole Connectors)http://www.andersonpower.com/

DX4WIN Logging programhttp://www.dx4win.com/

The RF Connectionhttp://www.therfc.com/

West Mountain Radiohttp://www.westmountainradio.com/index.html

UI-Viewhttp://www.therfc.com/

Contact Your Elected Officialhttp://www.governmentguide.com Type in your Zip code and follow the prompts.

ARRL Amateur Licensing Class Locator:http://www.arrl.org/FandES/courses/

ARRL VE Test Session Locator:http://www.arrl.org/arrlvec/examsearch.phtml

APRS Home Pagehttp://www.tapr.org/~kh2z/aprsplus/

Foundation for Amateur Radio (FAR)http://www.amateurradio-far.org/

By Jim KA3KAS

The PRGE ARES Monthly meeting are held the 3rd Monday of the month at at the Fire Services Building, 6820 Webster Ave, Hyattsville, MD. Eyeball QSO starts at 1900L.

Weekly Training VHF Net is held every Tuesday evening, 1930L on the K3ERA repeater, 145.23 (-) 110.9.

You do not have to be a member of ARES to join the Net.

The monthly High Frequency Hospital Net (HFHN) will be Wednesday at 1900L on 3820kHz. It is always held the Wednesday following the third Monday. A very informal Net reaching the Section and beyond. All are welcome.

73, de WB3KASPRGE ARES ECMDC SEC

P.G. ARES

The Broadband Double-Bazooka Antenna — How Broad Is It? 18-1

(Adapted from Technical Correspon-dence, QST, September 1976)

Sec 18.1 Introduction

T he increasing interest in usingthe coaxial dipole (sometimescalled the Double-Bazooka an-tenna) for its questionable in-

creased bandwidth is disturbing, espe-cially in view of the results of an analysisand some experiments I performed andpublished several years ago. The antenna,with its inner section of coax and its endsections of open-wire transmission line(ladder line), was popularized for amateuruse by Charles Whysall, W8TV, with anarticle in July 1968 QST (Ref 29). It ap-pears in several editions of The ARRLHandbook, although it has never ap-peared in The ARRL Antenna Book. Theresults of my analysis and experimentsindicate that the coaxial stubs in the co-axial-dipole configuration in general useby amateurs cannot provide the degree ofbandwidth that users of the coaxial dipoleappear to be measuring. Thus, it appearsthat features other than the shunt-com-pensating reactance provided by the co-axial stubs within the dipole must be re-sponsible for achieving the bandwidthcredited to the coaxial feature.

Here’s why the shunt-reactance com-pensating feature cannot make any sig-nificant contribution to bandwidth whenthe feed-line impedance is the usual ZC =50 ohms. Depending on the height above

ground, the input impedance of the aver-age 40-meter or 80-meter amateur dipolegenerally runs from 50 to 80 ohms of re-sistance at resonance. Thus, at resonance,the mismatch on a 50-ohm line is gener-ally quite low, from less than 1.1 to around1.6 at worst. On either side of resonance,the mismatch increases rapidly becauseof the reactance appearing in the dipoleimpedance. With the addition of the co-axial reactance-compensating shuntstubs, the dipole reactance should be ei-ther canceled at best, or at worst, reducedsomewhat by the opposite shunt reactanceprovided by the stubs.

Sec 18.2 ReactanceCancellation

Chapter 18

The Broadband Double-Bazooka

Antenna — How Broad Is It?

Although you’ll see later why it can’tbe, let’s first assume hypothetically thatcomplete cancellation of the reactance canbe achieved by the shunt reactance of thecoaxial stubs. This means the cancella-tion is obtained by a parallel-connectedreactance, which raises the series resis-tance of the dipole impedance to itsequivalent parallel-circuit value, which ismuch higher. And here is the crucialpoint. When you use a feed line havingan impedance which already matches thedipole terminal resistance rather well atresonance, the higher mismatch off reso-nance caused by the dipole reactance willnot be significantly different, whether itis caused by the reactance of the uncom-pensated dipole or by the increased resis-

18-2 Chapter 18

tance received in exchange for the can-celed reactance.

To illustrate with an example, con-sider an 80-meter dipole at a height whichyields a resonant terminal impedance of55 + j0 ohms at 3.75 MHz. The mismatchis 1.1 referred to 50 ohms. At 3.55 MHz,200 kHz below resonance, the series im-

pedance of the dipole is approximately 50– j90 ohms, which yields a 5.04:1 mis-match. Now a 90-ohm inductive reactanceplaced in series with the dipole terminalswould cancel the 90-ohm capacitive dipolereactance, and would leave the terminalresistance at 50 ohms. And we would in-deed have a perfect match.

Fig 18-1—Showing the impedance transformation for (A) 4.95-ohm center coaxial section,and (B) 50-ohm center section. At both A and B, the SWR without coaxial stubs is 5.04:1;with stubs at A it becomes 4.24:1, and in the practical case at B, 4.9:1.

The Broadband Double-Bazooka Antenna — How Broad Is It? 18-3

Unfortunately, the reactance pro-vided by the stubs in the coaxial dipole isin parallel with the dipole terminal im-pedance, not in series. And what a differ-ence this makes! The values of the equiva-lent parallel-circuit components of thedipole impedance at 3.55 MHz (50 – j90ohms) are RP = 212, and XP = –117.8 ohms,as shown in Fig 18-1A. When the –117.8ohms of capacitive dipole reactance is com-pletely canceled by an equal inductivereactance in parallel with the dipole im-pedance, the resulting impedance is 212+ j0 ohms. Bad news! The terminal resis-tance of the dipole made resonant at 3.55MHz by the shunt inductive reactance isnow 212 ohms, raised from 50 ohms bythe parallel connection! Canceling the di-pole reactance with parallel circuitry hasraised the resistive component by a fac-tor of 4.24 from 50 ohms up to 212 ohms,and coincidentally, the mismatch is now212/50 = 4.24:1. This is the lowest mis-match obtainable with any type of paral-lel compensation, because even thoughthe dipole reactance has been completelycanceled, we’re still stuck with the 212-ohm dipole terminal resistance.

Obviously, a reduction in mismatchfrom 5.04:1 to 4.24:1 is hardly worthwhile,even if it could be accomplished. But itcan’t. Why? Because a canceling reactanceof 117.8 ohms would require a coax hav-ing a characteristic impedance ZC of only4.95 ohms for the stubs — impractical tobuild. Here’s more bad news: Stubs madefrom 50-ohm coax yield a reactance tentimes too high — useless. What about 75-ohm coax? — 1.5 times worse. Incredible,you say? Example continues: A short-cir-cuited stub, λ/4 resonant at 3.75 MHzmade from 50-ohm coax, yields an induc-tive reactance of 595.4 ohms at 3.55 MHz,again 200 kHz below resonance. Thesevalues are calculated from the followingequations below at 3.55 MHz.

(Eq 18-1)

Shunting reactance per stubX = ZC tan θ = 595.4 ohms (Eq 18-2)when stub ZC = 50 ohms, and θ = 85.2°

Stub impedance required, each stub

(Eq 18-3)

when X = 117.8 ohms, and θ = 85.2°

ZC = X cot θ = 4.95 ohms2

The stubs in each dipole half (595.4ohms each) are connected in series witheach other through their center conduc-tors, so the total inductive reactance ofthe series combination is twice the valueof the single stub, or 1190.8 ohms. This isthe value appearing in parallel with thedipole impedance when using 50-ohmstubs. (Stubs of 75 ohms would yield1786.3 ohms.) The combined parallel com-ponents of the dipole impedance andshunt-stub reactance (RP = 212 ohms andXP = –117.8 ohms in parallel with stubs of+1190.8 ohms) yield total parallel-circuitcomponent values of RP = 212 ohms andXP = –130.7 ohms. The series-equivalentdipole input-terminal impedance is now58.4 – j94.7 ohms, also shown in Fig 18-1at B. The result? A whopping big reduc-tion in mismatch from 5.04 without stubs,all the way down to 4.9:1 with stubs! Go-ing still further, using the impractical4.95-ohm stubs that would cancel all thedipole reactance, the resulting non-reac-tive dipole terminal impedance of 212 +j0 ohms would still yield a 4.24:1 SWR onthe 50-ohm feed line. Conclusion? Isn’t itobvious that the stubs are ineffective? Andshouldn’t it be disturbing?

So you ask what other features canbe responsible for the lower mismatchvalues that appear to be measured by

Stub length θ = 3.55 × 90° = 85.2°3.75 MHz

18-4 Chapter 18

many coaxial-dipole users. I’ll give you anumber of possibilities.

First, the mismatch values shownhere are those which appear at the junc-tion of the feed line and the antenna, whilevalues measured at the input of the feedline will be somewhat lower because ofline attenuation.

Second, increased radiator thickness,especially when the stubs are constructedfrom RG-8, reduces the dipole character-istic impedance, resulting in less reac-tance than with the thinner wire dipolefor the same frequency excursion awayfrom resonance. (But who wants to hang125 feet of RG-8?)

Third, the extensions for building outfrom the shortened, short-circuited endsof the coax stubs to obtain an external halfwave are usually of multiwire construc-tion such as ladder line, which furtherincreases the effective radiator thickness.Such is especially helpful at the outer endsof the dipole, where the voltage and theelectric field are high. This reduces theoff-resonance reactance still further.

Fourth, the external dielectric mate-rial covering the stub coax increases bothdipole capacitance (increasing the electri-cal length) and effective diameter of theradiator. However, indications under in-vestigation suggest this increase in effec-tive diameter is also accompanied by in-creased ohmic loss in the external dielec-tric, which decreases the Q, and thus in-creases the bandwidth at the expense ofefficiency.

And fifth, in the range above 3:1,many SWR indicators show readings con-siderably lower than the true value. If youare interested in pursuing the subject fur-ther, I invite you to read my paper en-titled, “A Revealing Analysis of the Co-axial Dipole Antenna,” appearing on page46 of Ham Radio for August, 1976 (Ref62).

Sec 18.3 Resistive LossesSince I wrote the Technical Corre-

spondence item on which the above infor-mation is based, the true reason for theincreased dipole bandwidth obtained withthe Double-Bazooka has been discovered.But the reason is not a happy one. FrankWitt, AI1H (ex-W1DTY), with the aid of acomputer, has discovered that the in-creased bandwidth of the Double-Bazookaobtained by many amateurs actuallyarises from the previously undeterminedresistive loss due to the shunt conductionof the internal dielectric material in thecoaxial cable used to form the stubs, andnot by reactance cancellation from paral-lel-connected coaxial stubs (Ref 122). Inother words, the reduction in SWR ob-tained by those who use the Double-Ba-zooka is from lossy resistive loading, andnot from reactance cancellation. Unfortu-nately, the resistive loading results in areduction in radiated power, power lostin heating the stubs. Thus the users ofthis antenna are trading radiated powerfor a lower SWR on the feed line.

This turn of events is ironic for tworeasons. First, as I showed earlier, thereactance available in the coaxial stubsin the Double-Bazooka is insufficient toobtain any practical amount of reductionin the SWR-producing antenna-terminalreactance, much less total cancellation.And second, even if the stubs could pro-vide sufficient reactance to obtain com-plete cancellation, the improvement inbandwidth would still have been inconse-quential as a result of the cancellation,as I proved mathematically.

Earlier in this chapter, and in my co-axial dipole analysis (Ref 62), I pointedout the reason no bandwidth improvementis possible from parallel-circuit reactancecancellation when the feed line impedanceis 50 ohms. You’ll remember, this is be-

The Broadband Double-Bazooka Antenna — How Broad Is It? 18-5

cause the parallel-circuit form of the stubconnection used in the cancellation raisesthe effective terminal resistance as thereactance is lowered, resulting in a negli-gible reduction of mismatch. I also pointedout in the analysis that an improvementin bandwidth could be achieved with par-allel-circuit reactance cancellation by us-ing a feed line having an impedancehigher than the resonant terminal resis-tance of the dipole, and then accepting acorresponding increase in mismatch at theresonant frequency of the dipole. I showedthat by using a 144-ohm feed line to feeda dipole having a resonant terminal re-sistance of 72 ohms (yielding a 2:1 SWRat resonance), the 2:1 SWR bandwidthcould be improved from 165 kHz (on 50-ohm line with no stubs) to 565 kHz bycanceling the off-frequency dipole reac-tance with 19.7-ohm stubs. This resultsin a bandwidth improvement factor of 3.4.This arrangement is particularly appeal-ing for the 80-meter band, because itachieves an SWR of less than 2:1 acrossthe entire band, except at the center fre-quency where it is exactly 2:1.

In my analysis I offered no concretesuggestion for practicing this arrange-ment, except to suggest the use of two 75-ohm coaxial lines side by side resulting

in a 150-ohm balanced feedline. However,I considered using a lumped-constant ca-pacitor and inductor at the feed point foran impedance transformer to obtain therequired increase in feed-point imped-ance, and for reactance cancellation. ButI decided it was impractical to use, so Idiscarded the idea. On the other hand,Frank Witt came up with the same ideaand made it work! (See Ref 122.) In addi-tion, he also came up with a very clevermethod of using a shorted λ/4-stub imped-ance transformer to obtain both the re-quired step-up of impedance and the re-actance cancellation (Refs 123 and 124).His method uses the larger RG-8, or RG-213 coaxial cable for the λ/4 stub, ensur-ing optimum bandwidth improvement byreactance cancellation but with minimalloss in the cable stub. The Snyder dipole(Ref 130) uses a somewhat similar methodof broad-banding, but with higher lossthan with Witt’s method, because theSnyder dipole uses the higher-loss RG-141coax for the reactance cancellation.

For anyone wishing to build a truebroad-banded 80-meter dipole, the Wittarticles referenced above provide all of thenecessary details, plus the explanation ofhow it works.

18-6 Chapter 18

One-of-a-kind Double Bazooka, RCA Model POW! POW!, with double end-fire, narrow-beam, high gain, heavy particle thruster, presented to the author at the dinner celebratinghis retirement from the RCA Astro-Electronics Division’s Space Center in November 1980after 31 years with the Company.