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[TowerTalk] Linear Loaded Yagi's...

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Subject: [TowerTalk] Linear Loaded Yagi's...
From: Dino Darling <dino@k6rix.com>
Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2007 14:32:39 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
I was driving past N6MJ's casa today and admiring the good ol' KLM 
3ele 40-meter beam.

I understand that the linear loading makes the antenna elements 
electrically resonant while being physically shorter and more 
manageable.  But what does this do to the wave front/pattern coming 
out the front of this beast?  I would think that it is a compromise 
overall and certainly a compromise when compared to a full size yagi, 
but is there a right or wrong way to linear load a yagi?

In other words, is there some magic percentage of real length over 
loaded length?  Should the physical length be at least a 1/4 wave or 
possibly .43625 of a 1/2 wave?  (I just made up that number by the 
way)  Should the "tips" be longer or shorter than the initial element 
with the loading making up the difference?  Should each make up 1/3 
of the length?  Is it better to "end load" the element and only leave 
enough "tip" to tune?  Can you have too much loading?!

I'm sure a lot of thought went into how to properly "linear load" an 
element, and I'm just curious what the answer is.

Dino - K6RIX
dino@k6rix.com 


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