The Beverage antenna
November
16 , 2009
Antenna
Overview
Our
property is only about 90 feet wide but happily it is 495 feet long,
from east to west. This is plenty of room to run a short Beverage
antenna for receiving on the low bands (160M and 80M).
I
strung about 260 feet (estimated with Google Earth) of insulated
wire along a chain-link fence, then through the woods to the bottom
East end of the property.
This
260-foot length is close enough to the 270-foot length many experts
say is good for a short Beverage antenna. (See Gary
K9AY's page on the subject of Beverage length). The wire is
anywhere from 4 to 7 feet off the ground, and dips and dives along
its length -- the East end is a long way down-slope from the feedpoint
near the shack on the West end.
The
Beverage antenna layout at VA7ST
(larger view)
The
antenna is unterminated, making it bidirectional -- it hears from
the East and West, and because it is short, it has wide lobes in
both directions, which is very useful to me as this covers most
of the U.S. and all of the most populous areas of the Pacific and
Asia.
Why
use a Beverage antenna? It is a low-noise antenna that really hears
signals well, while removing a lot of noise.
The
homebrew transformer
I
estimated the impedance from the Beverage wire to ground at about
450 ohms. Feeding it with 50-ohm RG8X coax cable means I need to
transform the 450 ohms to 50 ohms -- which suggests a 9:1 transformer.
Guys in the know (for
example, Bill VE3NH) say if I use the correct binocular-core
toroid, with 2 turns on the primary (at the coax side) and 6 turns
on the secondary (at the Beverage side), I should be rolling in
clover.
Well,
I am rolling in clover. In 2008, I tried this arrangement using
a junk-box binocular core of unknown specifications (other than
it was a binocular core). I actually salvaged it from a TV 75-to-300
ohm coax-to-twinlead balun thingy. I knew it was probably the wrong
ferrite material -- likely 43 or other lower permeability, which
would be more suited to higher frequencies such as VHF
work -- or need many times more windings to work well on 160M or
80M.
But
I often ignore such details and so I gave 'er 2 turns on one side,
and 7 or 8 turns on the other side just to see if I could notice
any Beverage-type benefits from the 260-foot-long wire I had strung
up.
It
worked -- not great, perhaps, but it worked. Noise disappeared on
160M, not quite so much on 80M, and not at all on 40M (where signals
seemed so attenuated as to not be useful at all).
In
November 2009, I decided to do things properly and ordered a $35
RF Experimenters ferrite kit (Kit
#4) from Amidon Associates. This is a great deal, containing
four of the BN-73-202 binocular cores and dozens of other
cores of various materials, sizes and formats (including a nice
FT-240 toriod and wire to make a high-power 4:1 balun... this retails
for $14 alone!). The kit arrived from California in five days by
U.S. Postal Service.
The
original "just try it" 9:1 transformer of unknown material,
and the new Amidon BN-73-202 core. Each uses a 2-turn primary connected
to the coax, and a 6-turn secondary connected to the Beverage. (larger
view)
Beverage
vs. a 2-element 80M vertical array
Here's
how it sounds -- these recordings were taken on the evening of November
17, 2009 UTC (around 8 p.m. Pacific time).
ZS2JX
on 80M (.mp3 - 640kb) at 0400Z
The
audio opens with the Beverage antenna, then to my 2-element
80M vertical array pointed due East (or a bearing of 90 degrees
-- about 30 degrees from where Peter is at 60 degrees azimuth from
here). You'll hear the signal clearly on the Beverage, then louder
but with more noise on the vertical array.
I must note that Peter's signal was unusually loud on this autumn
evening.... the loudest I have ever heard him here. He uses a twin
vertical array very much like mine.
KH6LC
on 80M (.mp3 - 264kb) at 0500Z
The
audio opens with KH6LC on the Beverage antenna, about an hour after
Peter ZS2JX was recorded. You'll hear when I switch to my 2-element
vertical array pointed due West (almost exactly at KH6 from VE7).
The difference in noise is dramatic -- and it disappears again when
switching back to the Beverage antenna.
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