[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-15 Thread Edward R Cole
Antenna arrived today.  Shipping was $9.30 so total of $24.29.  All 
white plastic encapsulated: 4.5x4.5x1.0 inch and has four mounting 
holes on the flange.  I will mount it on a 1/8-inch thick aluminum 
plate attached to my satellite elevation crossboom using 
U-bolts.  Very nice looking workmanship.  8 dBi gain translates 
loosely to 6 dBd ( about the free-space gain of a 3-element yagi.

73, Ed - KL7UW

At 06:58 AM 6/9/2010, John Belstner wrote:
Good price Ed.  Its not worth the time trying to make something when 
you can buy something for $15.
Good luck and let me know how it works.

73, John

On Jun 8, 2010, at 10:15 PM, Edward R Cole wrote:

  Thanks, John!
 
  At 02:37 PM 6/7/2010, John Belstner wrote:
  Hi Domenico,
 
  The HG2414P is a linearly polarized patch.
  http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2414p.pdf
 
  The HG2409PC is a circular polarized patch (LH or RH available).
  http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2409pc.pdf
 
  Just ordered one for $14.99+ shipping.  I comes with 12-inch coax 
 with NF connector.  Other cables and /or connectors for $36.99
 
 
  They are about the same price too.
 
  73, John
 
 
 
  73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45
  ==
  BP40IQ   500 KHz - 10-GHz   www.kl7uw.com
  EME: 144-600w, 432-100w, 1296-60w, 3400-fall 2010
  DUBUS Magazine USA Rep dubus...@hotmail.com
  ==
 


73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45
==
BP40IQ   500 KHz - 10-GHz   www.kl7uw.com
EME: 144-600w, 432-100w, 1296-60w, 3400-fall 2010
DUBUS Magazine USA Rep dubus...@hotmail.com
==

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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-15 Thread i8cvs
- Original Message - 
From: Edward R Cole kl...@acsalaska.net
To: John Belstner jbelst...@yahoo.com
Cc: AMSAT-BB amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2010 8:45 AM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

 Antenna arrived today.  Shipping was $9.30 so total of $24.29.  All 
 white plastic encapsulated: 4.5x4.5x1.0 inch and has four mounting 
 holes on the flange.  I will mount it on a 1/8-inch thick aluminum 
 plate attached to my satellite elevation crossboom using 
 U-bolts.  Very nice looking workmanship.  8 dBi gain translates 
 loosely to 6 dBd ( about the free-space gain of a 3-element yagi.
 
 73, Ed - KL7UW

Hi Ed, KL7UM

What antenna model you purchased ? And for what use ? 

The HG2414P is a linearly polarized patch.
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2414p.pdf

The HG2409PC is a circular polarized patch (LH or RH available).
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2409pc.pdf

Tanks

73 de 

i8CVS Domenico






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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-09 Thread Luc Leblanc
Speaking of pannel

I try to get info's on a square patch antenna made by California Amplifier 
described as sich planar antenna/converter PCS/WCS filtered 
radar immune. There is a part number NO: 2240/020 Google search does not return 
anything just a clue as it seems to be in the MMDS or 
satellite range?

It is a flat pannel with linear polarization as there is V and H arrow marking 
in the back making the pannel installation mounted as a 
diamond instead of having the side of the square mounted parallel to the ground.


-


Luc Leblanc VE2DWE
Skype VE2DWE
www.qsl.net/ve2dwe
DSTAR urcall VE2DWE
WAC BASIC CW PHONE SATELLITE

 
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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-08 Thread i8cvs
Hi Joe, KK0SD

Or you can place the patches side by side and crossed by 90 degrees with
one of them advanced 1/4 wavelengt (1.23) free space in the axial direction
and feed them with equal feed line lenght.

It is easer because these panels are patch style antennas already supplyed
with the same lenght of coax cable and a connector but in any case you need
a power splitter with characteristic impedance of 35 ohm to transform the
25 ohm of the paralleled antennas to the 50 ohm of the main feed line or
a load as a preamplifier.

The problem here is that since they are pach style antennas you cannot
establish immediately if crossing one patch vertically polarized  and the
other one orizontally polarized the generated CP is RHCP or LHCP and
you need to make a measurement of circularity sense of radiation with
respect to a reference CP antenna as for example an helix antenna.

Just in case you want RHCP and instead you get LHCP it is sufficient to
rotate one patch by 180 degrees and the sense of the current flowing in the
side of the patch where the coax is connected will flow in the opposite
direction reversing LHCP to RHCP and vice versa.

The best solution instead to use two HG2414P linear paches is to buy
only one circularly polarized patch model HG2409PCR if you need to
radiate RHCP or a model HG09PCL if you need to radiate LHCP

To illuminate a dish and radiate or receive RHCP from reflection on it's
surface for use on satellites hopefully P3E in the future ? it is necessary
the patch model HG09PCL wich radiates LHCP toward the dish.

By the way a patch antenna has a lobe of radiation of about 150 degrees
wide at the -10 dB points and as a feed it is suitable for dishes having a
very low F/D ratio under 0.45 to prevent spillover.

Tanks to John ,W9EN to provide me with the internet address in order
to find the technical data of the above WiFi panels.

The HG2414P is a linearly polarized patch.
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2414p.pdf

The HG2409PC is a circular polarized patch (LH or RH available).
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2409pc.pdf

73 de

i8CVS Domenico

- Original Message -
From: Gary Joe Mayfield gary_mayfi...@hotmail.com
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2010 4:53 AM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels


 You can place them side by side and introduce the delay in the feed line
of
 one as well.

 73,
 Joe kk0sd

 -Original Message-
 From: amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org [mailto:amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org] On
 Behalf Of John Belstner
 Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 9:37 AM
 To: Greg D.
 Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
 Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

 Hi Greg,

 These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to
 place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one
 next to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern,
 and you should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The
 shape of the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you
 obtain circular polarization with a patch antenna.

 Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by
 making a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of
PVC
 of the right diameter is all you need.
 http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html

 Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.

 Good luck!

 73, John W9EN
 DM13le
 w...@amsat.org








 On Jun 6, 2010, at 1:15 PM, Greg D. wrote:

 
  Hi folks,
 
  Before I start nailing stuff together, I just want to verify what I'm
 doing...
 
  I want to make a 2.4ghz Right-Hand Circular antenna from two flat panel
 Wi-Fi antennas.  The idea is to mount them at 90 degrees from each other,
 with one 1/4 wavelength in front of the other.  Combine the two feeds with
a
 simple Tee (the feeds are of equal length), and into the pre-amp.  Since
I'm
 not transmitting, I'm not too worried about the resulting 25 ohm impedance
 (or should I be?).
 
  If it matters, the panels are from HyperLink Technologies, their model
 HG2414P, with a claimed 14dBi gain.
 
  So, the questions:
 
  1.  1/4 wavelength at 2401 mhz is ((3 x 10**8 / 2401 x 10**6) / 4)
meters,
 or about 1.23 inches.  Right?
 
  2.  Most of our 2.4 ghz satellite downlinks seem to be either linear or
 RHCP, so I'm guessing that RHCP is probably the preferred construction.
 (Yes?)
 
  3.  Looking at the Satellite Experimenter's Handbook (figure 7-10), I
 believe the panel rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise as seen from behind
 the panels should be the one farther out in front, for RHCP.  (Their
picture
 shows clockwise for LHCP.)  Is this correct?
 
  Thanks,
 
  Greg  KO6TH
 
  _
  The New Busy think 9 to 5 is a cute idea. Combine multiple calendars
with
 Hotmail.
 

http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?tile=multicalendarocid=PID28
 326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL:en-US:WM_HMP:042010_5

[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-08 Thread Edward R Cole
Thanks, John!

At 02:37 PM 6/7/2010, John Belstner wrote:
Hi Domenico,

The HG2414P is a linearly polarized patch.
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2414p.pdf

The HG2409PC is a circular polarized patch (LH or RH available).
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2409pc.pdf

Just ordered one for $14.99+ shipping.  I comes with 12-inch coax 
with NF connector.  Other cables and /or connectors for $36.99


They are about the same price too.

73, John



73, Ed - KL7UW, WD2XSH/45
==
BP40IQ   500 KHz - 10-GHz   www.kl7uw.com
EME: 144-600w, 432-100w, 1296-60w, 3400-fall 2010
DUBUS Magazine USA Rep dubus...@hotmail.com
==

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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread John Belstner
Hi Greg,

These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to place 
one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one next to the 
other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern, and you should 
use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The shape of the patch 
and position of the feed point is typically how you obtain circular 
polarization with a patch antenna.

Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by making a 
Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC of the right 
diameter is all you need.
http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html

Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.

Good luck!

73, John W9EN
DM13le
w...@amsat.org








On Jun 6, 2010, at 1:15 PM, Greg D. wrote:

 
 Hi folks,
 
 Before I start nailing stuff together, I just want to verify what I'm doing...
 
 I want to make a 2.4ghz Right-Hand Circular antenna from two flat panel Wi-Fi 
 antennas.  The idea is to mount them at 90 degrees from each other, with one 
 1/4 wavelength in front of the other.  Combine the two feeds with a simple 
 Tee (the feeds are of equal length), and into the pre-amp.  Since I'm not 
 transmitting, I'm not too worried about the resulting 25 ohm impedance (or 
 should I be?).
 
 If it matters, the panels are from HyperLink Technologies, their model 
 HG2414P, with a claimed 14dBi gain.
 
 So, the questions:
 
 1.  1/4 wavelength at 2401 mhz is ((3 x 10**8 / 2401 x 10**6) / 4) meters, or 
 about 1.23 inches.  Right?
 
 2.  Most of our 2.4 ghz satellite downlinks seem to be either linear or RHCP, 
 so I'm guessing that RHCP is probably the preferred construction.  (Yes?)  
 
 3.  Looking at the Satellite Experimenter's Handbook (figure 7-10), I believe 
 the panel rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise as seen from behind the panels 
 should be the one farther out in front, for RHCP.  (Their picture shows 
 clockwise for LHCP.)  Is this correct?
 
 Thanks,
 
 Greg  KO6TH
 
 _
 The New Busy think 9 to 5 is a cute idea. Combine multiple calendars with 
 Hotmail. 
 http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?tile=multicalendarocid=PID28326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL:en-US:WM_HMP:042010_5
 ___
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 Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program!
 Subscription settings: http://amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb


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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread i8cvs
- Original Message -
From: John Belstner jbelst...@yahoo.com
To: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 4:37 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

 Hi Greg,

 These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to
place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one
next to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern,
and you should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The
shape of the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you
obtain circular polarization with a patch antenna.

 Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by
making a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC
of the right diameter is all you need.
 http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html

 Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.

 Good luck!

 73, John W9EN
 DM13le
 w...@amsat.org


Hi John, W9EN

I would like to know if  these panels are patch style antennas linearly or
circularly polarized.

Tanks

73 de

i8CVS Domenico





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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread i8cvs
- Original Message -
From: John Belstner jbelst...@yahoo.com
To: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 4:37 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

 Hi Greg,

 These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to
place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one
next to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern,
and you should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The
shape of the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you
obtain circular polarization with a patch antenna.

 Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by
making a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC
of the right diameter is all you need.
 http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html

 Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.

 Good luck!

 73, John W9EN
 DM13le
 w...@amsat.org


Hi John, W9EN

I would like to know if  these panels are patch style antennas linearly or
circularly polarized.

Tanks

73 de

i8CVS Domenico




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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread John Belstner
Hi Domenico,

The HG2414P is a linearly polarized patch.
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2414p.pdf

The HG2409PC is a circular polarized patch (LH or RH available).
http://www.34t.com/PDF/hg2409pc.pdf

They are about the same price too.

73, John

On Jun 7, 2010, at 3:23 PM, i8cvs wrote:

 - Original Message -
 From: John Belstner jbelst...@yahoo.com
 To: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
 Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
 Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 4:37 PM
 Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels
 
 Hi Greg,
 
 These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to
 place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one
 next to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern,
 and you should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The
 shape of the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you
 obtain circular polarization with a patch antenna.
 
 Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by
 making a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC
 of the right diameter is all you need.
 http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html
 
 Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.
 
 Good luck!
 
 73, John W9EN
 DM13le
 w...@amsat.org
 
 
 Hi John, W9EN
 
 I would like to know if  these panels are patch style antennas linearly or
 circularly polarized.
 
 Tanks
 
 73 de
 
 i8CVS Domenico
 
 
 
 
 

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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread Gary Joe Mayfield
You can place them side by side and introduce the delay in the feed line of
one as well.

73,
Joe kk0sd

-Original Message-
From: amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org [mailto:amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org] On
Behalf Of John Belstner
Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 9:37 AM
To: Greg D.
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

Hi Greg,

These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to
place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one
next to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern,
and you should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The
shape of the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you
obtain circular polarization with a patch antenna.

Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by
making a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC
of the right diameter is all you need.
http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html

Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.

Good luck!

73, John W9EN
DM13le
w...@amsat.org








On Jun 6, 2010, at 1:15 PM, Greg D. wrote:

 
 Hi folks,
 
 Before I start nailing stuff together, I just want to verify what I'm
doing...
 
 I want to make a 2.4ghz Right-Hand Circular antenna from two flat panel
Wi-Fi antennas.  The idea is to mount them at 90 degrees from each other,
with one 1/4 wavelength in front of the other.  Combine the two feeds with a
simple Tee (the feeds are of equal length), and into the pre-amp.  Since I'm
not transmitting, I'm not too worried about the resulting 25 ohm impedance
(or should I be?).
 
 If it matters, the panels are from HyperLink Technologies, their model
HG2414P, with a claimed 14dBi gain.
 
 So, the questions:
 
 1.  1/4 wavelength at 2401 mhz is ((3 x 10**8 / 2401 x 10**6) / 4) meters,
or about 1.23 inches.  Right?
 
 2.  Most of our 2.4 ghz satellite downlinks seem to be either linear or
RHCP, so I'm guessing that RHCP is probably the preferred construction.
(Yes?)  
 
 3.  Looking at the Satellite Experimenter's Handbook (figure 7-10), I
believe the panel rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise as seen from behind
the panels should be the one farther out in front, for RHCP.  (Their picture
shows clockwise for LHCP.)  Is this correct?
 
 Thanks,
 
 Greg  KO6TH
 
 _
 The New Busy think 9 to 5 is a cute idea. Combine multiple calendars with
Hotmail. 

http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?tile=multicalendarocid=PID28
326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL:en-US:WM_HMP:042010_5
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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread Greg D.

Hi John,

At best?  Interesting...  I've seen many diagrams about mounting two linear 
YAGIs at 90 degrees from each other on the same cross arm, with the appropriate 
phasing harness.  My plan is to mount the two panels the same; one next to the 
other, rotated 45 degrees in opposite directions on the cross arm, with one 
pushed out 1.23 inches by a block of wood.  How bad will this be?  One will 
surely get some elliptical effects when the satellite is off-axis, but keeping 
them aimed at the satellite is what the rotor and computer are for...

I understand that I'm losing some NF by not using a proper splitter, but I 
don't have one handy, and this is (was) supposed to be a low effort adventure.  
Again, for AO-51 VS, I should have plenty of margin.

I've built several helixes, both 2.4 ghz for the feed to my BBQ grill, and my 
current L-band uplink, and could do the same here.  But, back to the low effort 
part of things...

If this simply isn't going to work, then I'll just leave my current setup 
alone.  It consists of a 3 3/4 turn helix feeding a 30 inch BBQ grill, lined 
with window screen.  All combined, it's kind of heavy, and the wooden cross arm 
is showing the effects of the weight and its age.  It was built for AO-40, and 
for the current satellites I don't really need this much gain, hence the 
replacement idea.  

Bad idea?

Greg  KO6TH




 Subject: Re: [amsat-bb]  CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels
 From: jbelst...@yahoo.com
 Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2010 07:37:17 -0700
 CC: amsat-bb@amsat.org
 To: ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
 
 Hi Greg,
 
 These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to 
 place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one next 
 to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern, and you 
 should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The shape of 
 the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you obtain circular 
 polarization with a patch antenna.
 
 Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by making 
 a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC of the 
 right diameter is all you need.
 http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html
 
 Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.
 
 Good luck!
 
 73, John W9EN
 DM13le
 w...@amsat.org
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 On Jun 6, 2010, at 1:15 PM, Greg D. wrote:
 
  
  Hi folks,
  
  Before I start nailing stuff together, I just want to verify what I'm 
  doing...
  
  I want to make a 2.4ghz Right-Hand Circular antenna from two flat panel 
  Wi-Fi antennas.  The idea is to mount them at 90 degrees from each other, 
  with one 1/4 wavelength in front of the other.  Combine the two feeds with 
  a simple Tee (the feeds are of equal length), and into the pre-amp.  Since 
  I'm not transmitting, I'm not too worried about the resulting 25 ohm 
  impedance (or should I be?).
  
  If it matters, the panels are from HyperLink Technologies, their model 
  HG2414P, with a claimed 14dBi gain.
  
  So, the questions:
  
  1.  1/4 wavelength at 2401 mhz is ((3 x 10**8 / 2401 x 10**6) / 4) meters, 
  or about 1.23 inches.  Right?
  
  2.  Most of our 2.4 ghz satellite downlinks seem to be either linear or 
  RHCP, so I'm guessing that RHCP is probably the preferred construction.  
  (Yes?)  
  
  3.  Looking at the Satellite Experimenter's Handbook (figure 7-10), I 
  believe the panel rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise as seen from behind 
  the panels should be the one farther out in front, for RHCP.  (Their 
  picture shows clockwise for LHCP.)  Is this correct?
  
  Thanks,
  
  Greg  KO6TH

  _
  The New Busy think 9 to 5 is a cute idea. Combine multiple calendars with 
  Hotmail. 
  http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?tile=multicalendarocid=PID28326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL:en-US:WM_HMP:042010_5
  ___
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  Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program!
  Subscription settings: http://amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb
 
  
_
The New Busy is not the too busy. Combine all your e-mail accounts with Hotmail.
http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?tile=multiaccountocid=PID28326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL:en-US:WM_HMP:042010_4
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[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-07 Thread John Belstner
Hi Greg,

What I meant by at best is that it will certainly be a challenge (at 2.5 GHz) 
to get one panel just a perfect 1/4 wavelength forward from the other.  It will 
be equally as challenging (at 2.5 GHz) to make 75 ohm phasing cables some odd 
multiple of 1/4 wavelength.  

I say that because I found it quite challenging to make phasing cables for 1.3 
GHz and even 440 MHz and I had a network analyzer to help me.  Just when I 
thought I had it cut perfect I put the connector on and found myself 10 to 20 
degrees off.  That will affect the circularity of the polarization.  I finally 
gave up and mounted the elements of one yagi 1/4 wavelength forward from the 
other and used equal length cables. 

Physical spacing is easier to achieve within a few degrees at the lower 
frequencies (VHF/UHF).  Another alternative would have been to use a 90 degree 
broadband hybrid (that can handle 25 watts) but that was much more $ than I 
wanted to spend.

If you have a helix already, I would use that.  But don't let me talk you out 
of experimentation.  It is possible and might be fun.

73, John


Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-Original Message-
From: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2010 20:22:22 
To: jbelst...@yahoo.com
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Subject: RE: [amsat-bb]  CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels


Hi John,

At best?  Interesting...  I've seen many diagrams about mounting two linear 
YAGIs at 90 degrees from each other on the same cross arm, with the appropriate 
phasing harness.  My plan is to mount the two panels the same; one next to the 
other, rotated 45 degrees in opposite directions on the cross arm, with one 
pushed out 1.23 inches by a block of wood.  How bad will this be?  One will 
surely get some elliptical effects when the satellite is off-axis, but keeping 
them aimed at the satellite is what the rotor and computer are for...

I understand that I'm losing some NF by not using a proper splitter, but I 
don't have one handy, and this is (was) supposed to be a low effort adventure.  
Again, for AO-51 VS, I should have plenty of margin.

I've built several helixes, both 2.4 ghz for the feed to my BBQ grill, and my 
current L-band uplink, and could do the same here.  But, back to the low effort 
part of things...

If this simply isn't going to work, then I'll just leave my current setup 
alone.  It consists of a 3 3/4 turn helix feeding a 30 inch BBQ grill, lined 
with window screen.  All combined, it's kind of heavy, and the wooden cross arm 
is showing the effects of the weight and its age.  It was built for AO-40, and 
for the current satellites I don't really need this much gain, hence the 
replacement idea.  

Bad idea?

Greg  KO6TH




 Subject: Re: [amsat-bb]  CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels
 From: jbelst...@yahoo.com
 Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2010 07:37:17 -0700
 CC: amsat-bb@amsat.org
 To: ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
 
 Hi Greg,
 
 These panels are patch style antennas and as such you will not be able to 
 place one behind the other to obtain circular polarization.  Placing one next 
 to the other will at best produce an elliptically polarized pattern, and you 
 should use a 50 ohm splitter to keep your impedance 50 ohms.  The shape of 
 the patch and position of the feed point is typically how you obtain circular 
 polarization with a patch antenna.
 
 Or, you can obtain RHCP with the same or more gain and less trouble by making 
 a Helix.  A sheet of aluminum, #8 copper wire and and a piece of PVC of the 
 right diameter is all you need.
 http://brneurosci.org/helix-antenna.html
 
 Or, you can try just a single panel and see how it performs for a while.
 
 Good luck!
 
 73, John W9EN
 DM13le
 w...@amsat.org
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 On Jun 6, 2010, at 1:15 PM, Greg D. wrote:
 
  
  Hi folks,
  
  Before I start nailing stuff together, I just want to verify what I'm 
  doing...
  
  I want to make a 2.4ghz Right-Hand Circular antenna from two flat panel 
  Wi-Fi antennas.  The idea is to mount them at 90 degrees from each other, 
  with one 1/4 wavelength in front of the other.  Combine the two feeds with 
  a simple Tee (the feeds are of equal length), and into the pre-amp.  Since 
  I'm not transmitting, I'm not too worried about the resulting 25 ohm 
  impedance (or should I be?).
  
  If it matters, the panels are from HyperLink Technologies, their model 
  HG2414P, with a claimed 14dBi gain.
  
  So, the questions:
  
  1.  1/4 wavelength at 2401 mhz is ((3 x 10**8 / 2401 x 10**6) / 4) meters, 
  or about 1.23 inches.  Right?
  
  2.  Most of our 2.4 ghz satellite downlinks seem to be either linear or 
  RHCP, so I'm guessing that RHCP is probably the preferred construction.  
  (Yes?)  
  
  3.  Looking at the Satellite Experimenter's Handbook (figure 7-10), I 
  believe the panel rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise as seen from behind 
  the panels should be the one farther out in front, for RHCP.  (Their 
  picture shows clockwise for LHCP.)  Is this correct?
  
  Thanks,
  
 

[amsat-bb] Re: CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

2010-06-06 Thread i8cvs
- Original Message -
From: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
To: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Sunday, June 06, 2010 10:15 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] CP antenna from 2 WiFi panels

 Hi folks,

 Before I start nailing stuff together, I just want to verify what I'm
 doing...

 I want to make a 2.4ghz Right-Hand Circular antenna from two flat panel
 Wi-Fi antennas.  The idea is to mount them at 90 degrees from each other,
 with one 1/4 wavelength in front of the other.  Combine the two feeds with
 a simple Tee (the feeds are of equal length), and into the pre-amp.  Since
 I'm not transmitting, I'm not too worried about the resulting 25 ohm
 impedance (or should I be?).

Hi Greg, KO6TH

You should be worried because even on receiving your VSWR is 50/25 = 2 and
since the downconverter has been tuned for the lovest noise figure with a 50
ohm noise source it happens that the noise generated by your downconverter
will be greater than you should expect with an input VSWR = 1


 If it matters, the panels are from HyperLink Technologies, their model
 HG2414P, with a claimed 14dBi gain.

 So, the questions:

 1.  1/4 wavelength at 2401 mhz is ((3 x 10**8 / 2401 x 10**6) / 4) meters,
 or about 1.23 inches.  Right?


Right, but 1.23 inches is a too short distance to mechanically separate by
1/4 wavelenght two flat panels so that if necessary it will more convenient
to use for spacing an odd numbar of 1/4 wavelenghts into free space at 2401
MHz and use two coax feed lines of the same lenght.

 2.  Most of our 2.4 ghz satellite downlinks seem to be either linear or
 RHCP, so I'm guessing that RHCP is probably the preferred construction.
 (Yes?)

All 2.4 GHz downlinks on the actual satellites are linear so that no matter
if you connect the antenna for RHCP or LHCP


 3.  Looking at the Satellite Experimenter's Handbook (figure 7-10), I
 believe the panel rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise as seen from
 behind
 the panels should be the one farther out in front, for RHCP.  (Their
 picture shows clockwise for LHCP.)  Is this correct?


It depends if you connect the inner conductor of the coax cables to A or to
A' for the front dipole and to B or to B' for the rear dipole.

In a separate email I will send to you a drawing to explain how two linearly
polarized waves radiated as a 90° components combines each other to generate
a resultant wave that can be RHCP or LHCP.

 Thanks,

 Greg  KO6TH


73 de

i8CVS Domenico





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