Short answer to my design dilemma     or     "how to kill a hot Sunday
afternoon"

Focus is -- Shortened dual band dipoles that use a coil for loading
a lowband wire and using the same coil to "trap" RF into the higher band,
inner portion of the wire.   [I was wondering how this worked, as JP had
sent me a EFHW design using a single coil using this trick]

The dual band antenna consists of a higher band antenna wire (i.e. 40
meters) with coils at the ends of this portion of the wire.  Short end
wires are added on the outside of the coils to get final resonance on the
lower band.   The coils play the part of low band loading coils and the
part of "traps" for the higher band RF.    Why?

The coils are positioned at the ends of the center, 1/2 wl, higher band
wire portion, which is a standing wave high voltage point and the XL of the
coil is designed to be quite high to stop any high band RF flowing outside
the high band inner wire...making a resonant dipole for 40 mx.    When
using the antenna as the longer 80 meter wire, the coil has less XL  (XL =
2PI F L), and since the coil is within the standing wave sinusoidal curve,
it acts as a loading coil.  RF will continue to flow out to the very end of
the antenna wire thus providing resonance at the lower frequency.  The
antenna, of course, has the benefit (to some) of being shorter, physically,
due to the loading effect of the coils.

The coils must have sufficient windings to produce the correct XL for each
band and they must be positioned properly within the wire for this dual
band system to work.

References:   --Alpha Delta' DX-CC and EE antennas use this design with
their ISO-RES coils.
--In Bill Orr''s Antenna Handbook 1979, he gives 2 example antennas --
20/80 and 40/80, which I modeled and they work out just great -- nice dual
band wires.  Orr also comments that this dual function coil trick was first
referenced in 1926 by the Bureau of Standards, but I could not find any
such publication about it.
--In Pop Com Feb 1988, W9INN built a 160 and 80 sloper vertical using this
trick (thanks to Matt, KM5VI).
So.......y'all probably knew all this, but I am still learning.  Thanks for
reading or deleting.  I've had fun!   Time for dinner.....       73...RH


On Sun, Jul 10, 2022 at 11:38 AM Rick Hiller <[email protected]> wrote:

> I appreciate everyone's comments and direction.  I knew if I pondered the
> question long enough and with the help of a few antenna craftsmen the
> answer has come to me.  It's nice to have knowledgeable and
> interested friends.
>
> For others, discovery is a light going off or a bell dinging when you get
> the answer you seek.  For me, most of the time, it is either a Homer
> Simpson "DUH" or  a 2 x 4 to the side of the head.   It's was no different
> this time.  The answer to be told soon after a few EZNEC runs.
>
> Thanks for all of your comments.
>
> Regards...Rick   W5RH
>
> On Sat, Jul 9, 2022 at 8:57 PM Rick Hiller <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Loading coils used also as traps are my focus.  Alpha Delta uses what
>> they call an Iso-Res  Isolation (trap) and Resonator (loading coil) in
>> their antennas.   Bill Orr mentions a few antennas in his books that use
>> them, but they are cookbook examples for building and nothing on the design
>> of the dual function coil.
>>
>> Can any one provide me with a book reference or a URL etc. that might
>> provide clues as to the design, building and measurement of such devices?
>>
>> I realize that certain coils have a self-resonance and I can find info on
>> that, but there are no references that apply this self-resonance to an
>> antenna design.
>>
>> Contact me direct, if you wish.   [email protected]
>>
>>
>> More detail if you wish to read about it..............JP sent me a design
>> of a shortened EFHW for 80 and 40 that uses a 110 uH coil near the end of
>> the antenna wire that provides loading for 80 MX and traps 40 MX energy,
>> thus making the antenna dual band.  I modeled it in EZNEC based on the
>> basic design, and lo and behold the antenna when doing an SWR sweep does
>> indeed resonant on 80 and 40.  Displaying the currents on the wire show
>> that it is used at full length on 80 and stops at the coil on 40.
>> I think I am missing something in my research.  TNX for reading....any
>> help appreciated.
>>
>> TNX ES 73....W5RH
>> Rick Hiller
>> *e-mail:     [email protected] <[email protected]>H choke *
>> *Cell:        832-474-3713*
>> *Physical: 9031 Troulon Drive*
>> *               Houston, TX 77036*
>>
>
>
> --
> Rick Hiller
> *e-mail:     [email protected] <[email protected]>*
> *Cell:        832-474-3713*
> *Physical: 9031 Troulon Drive*
> *               Houston, TX 77036*
>


-- 
Rick Hiller
*e-mail:     [email protected] <[email protected]>*
*Cell:        832-474-3713*
*Physical: 9031 Troulon Drive*
*               Houston, TX 77036*
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