View Single Post
  #69   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.design,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.cad,sci.electronics.basics
Jeff Liebermann Jeff Liebermann is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,045
Default Garage Door Opener Range.

On Fri, 09 May 2014 20:41:15 +0300, wrote:

Do you believe the numbers it is giving you? 5.19 dB for a 1/4 wave ground
plane antenna? Also, gain is in dB, not dBm. Just a little nit.


It is not that far away, assuming perfect ground, which explains the
lower lobe to reflected upwards, which would explain 3 dB of gain. The
remaining 2.19 dB sounds much like the dipole gain over an isotropic
radiator. So actually, we should talk about 5.19 dBi gain or actually
_directivity_.


Good explanation and you're correct about the directivity. Having
gain in the wrong direction isn't very useful. In the case of the
shortened monopole, the peak gain is in roughly the correct direction
needed to be useful, so it's not an issue. However, other antenna
configurations can cause problems. For example, here's an animated
GIF of a common discone antenna. Up to about 400 MHz, the major lobe
(i.e. maximum gain) is roughly horizontal, making the antenna quite
useable. However, between 400 and 1000 MHz, most of the RF goes
straight up. There's little RF left at the horizon, where it's
needed. Such an antenna might be good for listening to airplanes, but
not terrestrial stations.

For electrically small antennas, the efficiency can be
much less than 100 %, thus the _gain_ would be less.


The radiation efficiency and internal losses are included in the gain
calculation. For example, if I made the antenna from lossy material,
it would show up as a loss in gain. However, for a fairly close to
ideal antenna, the radiation efficiency barely changes.

wavelengths gain Efficiency Radiation
(db) Efficiency
0.250 5.19 100% 99.93%
0.125 4.85 100% 99.66%
0.050 4.75 100% 99.09%

Again, the problem is matching the impedance of the shortened antenna.
The losses are not in the antenna. They're in the matching circuit.

wavelengths gain(db) VSWR
(50ohms)
0.250 5.19 1.74:1
0.125 4.85 158:1
0.050 4.75 5954:1

The 0.050 wavelength monopole shows a feed impedance of 1.52-j707
which is going to be verrrrrry difficult to match efficiently to 50
ohms. Got a 500:1 transformer handy?

--
Jeff Liebermann

150 Felker St #D
http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558