jvok wrote: ↑Fri Dec 03, 2021 9:58 pm
How tall was your shortened MW dipole Albert?
Also why a dipole instead of a 1/4 wave vertical? Just so you don't need the ground system?
It's about 11m tall. The counterpoise element is to get rid of the need to work against a ground mat. Radiation efficiency is pretty good as far as shortened aerials go.
The idea came from an article in the late 80s in Radcom for a Top Band (160m) helical dipole. The prototypes were wound from about a quarter wavelength of wire for each element with a tapered wind along a fibreglass "roach pole" fishing rod. The feed point impedance is of the order of 8Ω, so a matching network is necessary to transform to match 50Ω. We used a balun which was quite broadly tuned. The other issue we expected was usual the narrowed bandwidth of shortened aerials, but we found that the bandwidth was more than we expected, and we didn't need to take any measures to handle that.
The only problems we encountered were supporting the feedline away from the elements, and finding something to hang the aerial from! It's not practical below about 1 MHz because it gets rather big, but if you want to use it at the top end of the band it works rather well.
We've used these for "RSL" installations and at festivals. There are also a few in full-time use in South America.