On Jun 13, 9:38*am, tony sayer wrote:
In article
s.com, robgraham scribeth thus
On Jun 13, 8:48*am, Andy Burns wrote:
Tim W wrote:
an aerial is just a length of metal I think
Sometimes with embedded voodo, the ones embedded within laptop screens
especially so.
Am I right in thinking I can leave the insulation on a length of copper wire
and use that? Will the length I cut it at make a difference? I mean
obviously it will be longer, maybe 30" instead of 3" but does it have to be
a multiple of a wavelength or something?
Usually 1/4 or 1/2 wavelength, but that'll be what you already have
http://www.fpvuk.org/forum/index.php?topic=1391.0
I am guessing the aerial can be
thin - a coat hanger not necessary here - but is solid copper better than
strands?
What's the velocity factor of a coathanger?
If you want to make existing access point more directional, you could
try this
http://www.freeantennas.com/projects/Ez-10/
I get similar moans from my son whose pc is at the other end of the
house and having been in electronics, though not RF, can at least do
all the making part.
I read through the links and was rewarded at least in understanding
why a coat hanger might have a velocity factor :) - no doubt this
factor was mentioned in my training all too many years ago now.
Two questions - why does the designer of the aerial on the FPV forum
not take the velocity factor into account, and why does it only apply
to the 'folded' back section - I can't see that the 'bazooka'
configuration is any different electrically?
Rob
The velocity factor is the slowing of a Radio frequency signal in a
metal as In metals they travel slower than free space...
Its all there on goggle...
--
Tony Sayer
Yep, Tony - been to Google and read that. Google might answer my
exact questions if I could find the right search terms but then that
doesn't help anyone else. It's the exact questions that require the
answer.
Rob