On 11/26/13 8:51 AM, Attila Kinali wrote:
On Tue, 26 Nov 2013 11:37:10 -0500
"quartz55" <[email protected]> wrote:

Does anyone know what is inside the commercial units, like the PCTEL 
GPS-TMG-HR-26N I have?

Three types of GPS antennas are common:
* ceramic carrier patch antennas
* cross dipole antennas
* helical designs

The patch antennas are even found in "expensive" antennas with cones
or choke rings.


the challenge with a patch is getting a pattern that goes down to the horizon.


The Trimble Bullet antenna is AFAIK a cross dipole type where the dipole
ends are bend down for a more GPS like radiation pattern.

Crossed dipoles are very common in "survey grade" antennas. Typically the dipole elements are more "fan" like, wide at the end skinny in the middle, and the whole thing is shaped like it is draped across a dome. The "bowtie" improves the bandwidth, which is important in a 3 band antenna. Drooping the ends helps improve the pattern, and also changes the input Z. I don't know how they do the phase quadrature.. do they make one dipole a bit longer and the other a bit shorter? I don't know that this works over the whole L5,L2, L1 band, though. Or some sort of quadrature hybrid.


Helical designs vary greatly in their fabrication. I think most of the
newer ones use some flex PCB that is bend into a pipe shape to form the
helix (very cheap from a manufacturing point of view).
High quality helix are either free space (like your QFH) or done on some
ceramic pipe. I'm not aware of anyone using MID (molded interconnect device)
for this kind of antenna. Although MID antennas have been the standard
for cellphone antennas for quite some time already.

The classic helibowl antenna uses wire or copper foil tape wound on a plastic cup. Helicals are pretty non critical in design, but don't necessarily have good patterns at the horizon.

don't forget the spiral pinwheel antenna, e.g. from Novatel.







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