The 3 element is a commercial antenna by PAN International, which I
slightly modified for good performance on the 10m Amateur-Radio band.
Design Frequency: 28.300 MHz
-
Usable Bandwidth: 600 kHz
-
Return loss: better than 20 dB with center at 28.270 MHz
-
Gain: > 7.5 dBi
-
Front/Back ratio: > 20 dB
This antenna is a commercial CB Radio antenna distributed by PAN International. For this kind of antenna it looked quite robust and indeed it survived a wind storm with wind speeds up to 160 km/h.
Feeding the antenna
This antenna is fed by a gamma match. Setting up this antenna was very
easy. Position of the gamma match as approximately moving the bracket as
far inside as possible and the inner conductor "looks out" by 70 mm at
the end.
Modify the elements
Calculating the antenna with EZNEC gave already very good results. The
redesign for 28.270 MHz resulted in shorting each elements' end by 40
mm. This is indeed very easy, as there exist two holes for self-cutting
screws separated by 40 mm. Move the outer element in by one hole, fix it
with a screw and drill a hole for the second screw. Ready. You shall
better not use the screws delivered with the antenna as they tend to
oxidation (rust) very quickly. I bought a complete new V2A set of screws
and I have no problems. The elements are electrically connected to the
boom. What I dislike is the SO239 connector "popped" to a sheet of
metal. I will replace this by a N-Connector now.
Performance
The antenna is up since October 1998 and performance is good. Contacts
were made with all continents using my TS690 with about 90 Watts output.
It does not perform as our "pile-up-cracker" does, but I feel it works
better than a tribander. The antenna is installed at about 9 m above
ground. This is indeed not very high, but the surrounding terrain
descents in most directions putting the antenna virtually to a higher
position. The feedline I use is a low-loss UHF cable (AirCell 2000) with
less than 0.4 dB of loss on the 22m run. I also used it with 750 Watts
output from a 3-500 for a while and it did a fine job.
EZNEC
Here is the EZNEC simulation file: cy28-3dopt.zip
DIAGRAMS AND SIMULATIONS
Azimuth diagram of the 3 Element for 28.3 MHz. Note the good front to back ratio.
Elevation diagram. Vertical attenuation is around 10 dB.
|