Title: HF Vertical Antenna Ground Systems Some Experiments
1HF Vertical Antenna Ground SystemsSome
Experiments
- Rudy Severns N6LF
- antennasbyn6lf.com
2- Weve been using verticals for over 100 years.
- Is there really anything new to be said about
ground systems for verticals? - Yes!
- Little attention has been given to HF (2-30 MHz)
ground systems like those used by amateurs. - Soil behavior at HF is different from BC.
3- Typical amateur antennas use
- radials lying on the ground surface,
- or elevated radials,
- and/or small numbers of radials,
- short loaded verticals
4Some typical questions
- How much of ground system is it worth putting
down? - What will I gain (in dB) by adding more radials?
- Does it matter if I lay the radials on the ground
surface? - Are a few long radials useful?
- Are four elevated radials really as good as lots
of buried radials? - How well do gullwing elevated radials work?
5- We can use modeling or calculations to answer
these questions but most people dont have a lot
confidence in mathematical exercises. - High quality field measurements on real antennas
are more likely to be believed. - Over the past year I have done a series of
experiments on HF verticals with different ground
systems. - That is the subject of todays talk.
6- Whats the purpose of the ground system?
- Its there to reduce the power absorbed by the
soil close to the antenna (within a ¼-wave or
so). - The ground system increases your signal by
reducing the power dissipated in the soil and
maximizing the radiated power. - Any practical ground system will not affect the
radiation angle or far-field pattern!
7Power transmission
antenna 1
antenna 2
antenna equivalent circuit
8E and H fields around a vertical
ground
soil equivalent
9The Magnetic field (H)
10The Electric Field (E)
E field
V
-
resistor
11H-Field Currents Near A Vertical
12Relative Ground Current
loss is proportional to I2!
13Electric Field Intensity Near The Base
- f 1.8 MHz and Power 1500 W
14H-Field Loss
15E-Field Loss
16Power transmission
antenna 1
antenna 2
antenna equivalent circuit
17Measurement schemes
- The classical technique is to excite the test
antenna with a known power and measure the
resulting signal strength at some point in the
far field (gt2.5 wavelengths for 1/4-wave
vertical). - This approach takes great care and good equipment
to make accurate measurements.
18S21
- The modern alternative is to use a vector network
analyzer (VNA) in the transmission mode. - This approach is capable of reliable measurements
to lt0.1 dB. - The VNA will also give you the input impedance of
the antenna at the feed-point.
rx antenna
test antenna
19Some experimental results
20- The first experiment was a 160 m, ¼-wave wire
vertical with two ground stakes and 4 to 64
radials. - Measurements were made with a spectrum analyzer
as the receiver.
21Test Results
delta gain 2.4 dB
22A new antenna test range
23Antenna under test
24Test antenna with sliding height base
25Adding radials to the base
26Elevated radials
27Elevated radials close-up
28Loop receiving antenna
29Receiving antenna at 40
N7MQ holding up the mast!
30Network analyzers
note, automatic, organic, heating system
Homebrew N2PK
HP3577A with S-box
31Inside the N2PK VNA
32Test antennas
- A 1/4-wave 40m tubing vertical.
- An 1/8-wave 40m tubing vertical with top loading.
- An 1/8-wave 40m tubing vertical resonated with a
base inductor. - A 40 m Hamstick mobile whip.
- SteppIR vertical
331/8-wave, top-loaded, 40 m vertical
34Measured improvement over a single ground stake
f7.2 MHz
35Caution!
- Your mileage may vary!
- My soil is pretty good but for poorer soils
expect more improvement with more radials. - The degree of improvement will also depend on the
frequency - soil characteristics change with frequency,
- at a given distance in wavelengths the field
intensity increases with frequency.
36Measured base impedances
37Antenna resonance versus radial number
38Radial current for different heights
39A current sensor
40Radial current measurements
41Measured current distribution on a radial
42Radial current distribution
Radial number Relative radial current normalized to 1 A total
1 0.239
2 0.239
3 0.252
4 0.269
43Field day scenario
- You want a 40 m vertical for field day.
- ¼-wave 33. So you start with about 33 of
aluminum tubing for the radiator and four 33
wire radials. - You erect this, with the radials lying on the
ground and its resonant well below the band! - What to do?
- Nothing, use a tuner and move on,
- Shorten vertical until its resonant,
- add more radials
- or, shorten the radials until the antenna is
resonant. - Which is best?
44NEC modeling prediction
45- Lets do an experiment
- isolate the base of the antenna with a common
mode choke (a balun). - lay out sixty four 33 radials and adjust the
vertical height to resonate (reference height). - remove all but four of the radials
- Measure S21 with the reference height.
- Measure S21 with the vertical shortened to
re-resonate. - Measure S21 with the reference height as we
shorten the radials.
46Effect of shorting radials, constant height
47Radial current distribution
48Direct measurement of several options
- Do nothing G 0 dB
- Shorten height G-0.8 dB
- Shorten radials G3.5 dB
- Use 16 radials G4 dB
- Use 64 radials G5.9 dB
49Another experiment
50An observation
- When you have only four radials the test results
are always a bit squirrelly - small variations in radial layout,
- coupling to other conductors,
- like the feed-line,
- all effect the measurements making close
repeatability difficult between experiments. - The whole system is very sensitive to everything!
- This nonsense goes away as the number of radials
increases!
51What about a few elevated radials versus a large
number of surface radials?
52NEC modeling prediction
534-64 radials lying on ground surface
544 radials raised above ground
55- NEC modeling predicts that four elevated radials
will perform as well as 64 radials lying on the
ground. - In this example, measurements show no significant
difference in signal strength between 64 radials
lying on the ground and 4 radials at 4!
56Some more elevated radial experiments
57configuration number S21 dB Zi Ohms configuration h33.5
1 0 39j6.3 base 4 radials elevated 48
2 -0.47 36j6.2 base at ground level radial ends at 48
3 -0.65 29-j11 gullwing, base at ground level ends at 48
4 -0.36 39j0.9 base radials at 48 four 17.5 radials, 2.2 uH L
5 -5.19 132j22 base radials at ground level
6 -1.79 51j1.0 base radials at ground level four 21 radials
7 -0.1 40-j1.2 base radials at ground level 64, 33 radials
58More on elevated radials
- If you use more than 4 radials in an elevated
system - the screen resonances and radial current
asymmetries decrease. - the reactive part of the feed-point impedance
changes more slowly as you add radials so you
have a better SWR bandwidth. - the ground loss does not improve much however.
59Summary
- Sparse radial screens (less than 16 radials) can
have a number of problems - increased loss with longer radials
- unequal current distributions between radials.
- system resonance shifts.
- A few long radials can be worse than shorter
ones. - screen resonances can alter the radiation pattern
as the radials begin to radiate substantially.
60Summary continued
- Try to use at least 8 radials but 16 is better.
- The more radials you use, the longer they can be.
- A number of 1/8-wave radials will be better than
half that number of ¼-wave radials. At least
until you have 32 or more radials. - In elevated systems
- try to use at least 8 radials
- you can use radials shorter than ¼-wave and
either re-resonate with a small L or make the
vertical taller or add some top loading. - the gullwing geometry can work.
61Some advice
- Try to use more radials.
- Four is just not enough.
- All the funny business goes away with more
radials! - 16 radials are a good compromise.