Section 6: Feed Lines & Antenna Systems Canadian Amateur Radio Basic Qualification (B-006)

6.1 Transmission Lines B-006-001

Every antenna system starts with a simple question: how does the RF signal get from your radio to the antenna on the roof? The answer is a transmission line -- a specialized cable designed to carry radio-frequency energy with minimal loss. Understanding transmission lines is foundational because even the best antenna is useless if the feed line wastes your power before it arrives.
Think of a transmission line like a water pipe. The pipe's diameter and material determine how much water it can carry and how much pressure it can handle -- regardless of how long the pipe is. In the same way, characteristic impedance is set by the line's physical construction, not its length.

A transmission line (also called a feed line) is the dedicated RF path between your transceiver and your antenna. It is not a ground wire, not a radial wire, and not a counterpoise -- it is the cable that actually carries the signal back and forth. Every amateur station has one, and choosing the right type matters enormously for performance.

Characteristic Impedance

Every transmission line has a characteristic impedance (Z0), measured in ohms. This is arguably the single most important concept in feed line theory. The characteristic impedance is determined entirely by the physical dimensions and relative positions of the conductors -- the size and spacing of the wires, and the dielectric material between them. It has nothing to do with the line's length, the operating frequency, or what load is connected at the far end.

Because characteristic impedance depends on the ratio of conductor diameters (not the absolute size), coaxial cables of different physical diameters can share the same impedance. And if you cut a 20-metre piece of 52-ohm cable down to 10 metres, it is still 52 ohms.

The factors that set impedance differ slightly between line types. For an open-wire line, impedance is determined by the distance between the centres of the conductors and the diameter of the conductors. For a coaxial cable, it is the ratio of the inner diameter of the outer shield to the diameter of the inner conductor. In both cases, it is geometry that matters -- not length, not frequency.

Line TypeImpedance Determined By
Open-wire line Distance between centres of conductors and diameter of conductors
Coaxial cable Ratio of inner diameter of outer shield to diameter of inner conductor

Impedance Matching and Termination

When a transmission line is terminated by a load whose impedance exactly matches the line's characteristic impedance, all of the RF energy is absorbed by the load. None is reflected back. For instance, a 50-ohm coaxial cable terminated by a purely resistive 50-ohm load will absorb all the RF energy it receives -- this is the ideal matched condition.

If the termination differs significantly from the characteristic impedance, the impedance measured at the input of the line becomes a value influenced by line length. The mismatch creates standing waves, and the apparent impedance varies along the line depending on where you measure. This is why impedance matching is so critical in amateur radio.

If you cut a 52-ohm cable in half, what is the impedance of each piece? Still 52 ohms -- impedance does not depend on length.

Velocity Factor

Radio signals travel slower in a transmission line than in free space. The velocity factor is the ratio of signal speed in the line to the speed of light, typically ranging from about 0.66 to 0.95 depending on the cable. The major factor influencing the velocity factor of a coaxial cable is the dielectric material -- the insulation between the inner conductor and the shield. Foam dielectrics have a higher velocity factor (closer to 1.0) than solid dielectrics because foam is mostly air.

Burial-Rated Cable

If you need to run a feed line underground, the commonly available transmission line that can be buried directly in the ground without adverse effects is coaxial cable. Its outer jacket and shield protect it from moisture and soil contact. Open-wire line and window line cannot be buried because their conductors are exposed or minimally insulated.

Practice Questions: B-006-001 -- Transmission Lines

B-006-001-001: What connects your transceiver to your antenna?

  • A) A counterpoise wire
  • B) A ground wire
  • C) A radial wire
  • D) A transmission line

B-006-001-002: The characteristic impedance of a transmission line is determined by the:

  • A) physical dimensions and relative positions of the conductors
  • B) length of the line
  • C) frequency at which the line is operated
  • D) load placed at the end of the line

B-006-001-003: The characteristic impedance of a 20-metre piece of transmission line is 52 ohms. What would the impedance be if 10 metres were cut off?

  • A) 52 ohms
  • B) 26 ohms
  • C) 104 ohms
  • D) 13 ohms

B-006-001-004: Why can coaxial cables of different diameters have the same characteristic impedance?

  • A) Characteristic impedance is independent of line diameter
  • B) Characteristic impedance is set by the choice of conducting material
  • C) Their characteristic impedance depends on operating frequency
  • D) Their characteristic impedance depends on the ratio of conductor diameters

B-006-001-005: What commonly available transmission line can be buried directly in the ground for some distance without adverse effects?

  • A) 600-ohm open-wire line
  • B) 75-ohm twin-lead
  • C) Coaxial cable
  • D) 300-ohm window line

B-006-001-006: A transmitter is delivering RF energy into a coaxial cable with a characteristic impedance of 50 ohms. The cable is terminated by a purely resistive load. What value of load resistance will absorb all the RF energy it receives?

  • A) 25 ohms
  • B) 100 ohms
  • C) 200 ohms
  • D) 50 ohms

B-006-001-007: What is the major factor influencing the velocity factor of a coaxial cable?

  • A) Size and spacing of the conductors
  • B) Use of a solid or braided shield
  • C) Dielectric material
  • D) Center conductor material

B-006-001-008: The characteristic impedance of an open-wire transmission line depends, in part, on the diameter of its conductors. What other dimension determines its characteristic impedance?

  • A) Height above ground
  • B) Distance to metal structures
  • C) Spacing of the conductors
  • D) Length of the line

B-006-001-009: A transmission line is terminated by an impedance that differs significantly from the characteristic impedance of the line. What impedance will be measured at the input of the line?

  • A) A zero impedance
  • B) An impedance nearly equal to characteristic impedance
  • C) A value of impedance influenced by line length
  • D) An infinite impedance

B-006-001-010: What factors determine the characteristic impedance of an open-wire transmission line?

  • A) The radius of the conductors and the frequency of the signal
  • B) The frequency of the signal and the length of the line
  • C) The distance between the centres of the conductors and the diameter of the conductors
  • D) The distance between the centres of the conductors and the length of the line

B-006-001-011: What factors determine the characteristic impedance of a coaxial transmission line?

  • A) The diameter of the shield and the frequency of the signal
  • B) The frequency of the signal and the length of the line
  • C) The ratio of the diameter of the outer shield to the diameter of the inner conductor
  • D) The diameter of the shield and the length of the line

6.2 Transmission Line Types B-006-002

Not all feed lines are created equal. The three main families -- coaxial cable, open-wire line, and window line -- each offer different trade-offs between convenience, loss, and impedance. Understanding their construction helps you choose the right one for your station and know when to use a balun to connect them.
  COAXIAL CABLE (Cross-section)          OPEN-WIRE LINE          WINDOW LINE (Ladder Line)
  ========================          ===============          ========================

       Outer Jacket                 Wire    Wire            Wire    Wire
      +------------+                 |        |              |        |
      | ########## | Braided        |        |       +------+--------+------+
      | # ~~~~~~ # | Shield        |        |       | Insulating    |      |
      | # ~ ** ~ # |               |        |       |  spacer with  |      |
      | # ~~~~~~ # | Dielectric    |        |       |   windows     |      |
      | ########## |               |        |       +------+--------+------+
      +------------+                |        |              |        |
                                   Insulated             Two wires embedded
       * = Centre conductor          spreaders            in flat insulation
       ~ = Dielectric                (rods)               with cutout windows
       # = Shield/braid
Cross-sections of common transmission line types

Coaxial cable is the most widely used transmission line in amateur radio. It has a centre wire inside an insulating material (the dielectric), surrounded by a metal shield or sleeve, all wrapped in a protective outer jacket. The shield confines the RF fields inside the cable and provides shielding from external interference. Because it is self-shielding, coax can be run along metal structures, through walls, and even buried underground without problems.

Window line (also called ladder line) has two wires side-by-side embedded in insulating material, with periodic cutouts ("windows") to reduce dielectric losses. Its typical impedance is 300 or 450 ohms. Open-wire line is made of two conductors held apart by insulated rods (called spreaders) at regular intervals. It has very low loss and a typical impedance of 450-600 ohms. The key distinction is that open-wire line uses rigid insulated spreaders to maintain a constant distance between the conductors.

Balanced vs. Unbalanced Lines

A balanced transmission line is made of two parallel wires -- both conductors carry equal and opposite currents. Open-wire line, window line, and twin-lead are all balanced. Coaxial cable, by contrast, is inherently unbalanced because one conductor (the shield) is typically connected to ground. A transmission line becomes unbalanced when one conductor is connected to ground.

The distinction between balanced and unbalanced matters because many common antennas (like dipoles) are balanced devices, while most transceivers use unbalanced coaxial outputs. Connecting these directly without conversion causes current to flow on the outside of the coax shield, leading to interference and pattern distortion.

Baluns

A balun (BALanced-to-UNbalanced) is a transformer device that bridges the gap between balanced and unbalanced systems. Its purpose is to connect balanced and unbalanced systems together properly. For example, connecting coaxial cable (unbalanced) to a dipole antenna (balanced) requires a balun at the junction.

When feeding a dipole antenna with 50-ohm coaxial cable, the balun should be installed between the coaxial cable and the antenna -- right at the feed point where the transition from unbalanced to balanced occurs. A balun can also be used to connect coaxial cable to window line (since coax is unbalanced and window line is balanced), or any time you need to bridge between these two worlds.

If your antenna tuner does not have a balanced output and you wish to use window line to feed an HF antenna, place a balun between the tuner and the transmission line to make the conversion.

Think of a balun like a language translator. Your coax "speaks" unbalanced, and your dipole "speaks" balanced. Without a translator (balun) at the junction, the communication is garbled -- current flows on the outside of the coax shield, causing interference and pattern distortion.
Where does a balun go when feeding a dipole with coax? Between the coaxial cable and the antenna, at the feed point.
Practice Questions: B-006-002 -- Transmission Line Types

B-006-002-001: What kind of transmission line has a centre wire inside an insulating material that is covered by a metal shield or sleeve?

  • A) Coaxial cable
  • B) Window line
  • C) Open-wire line
  • D) Waveguide

B-006-002-002: What kind of transmission line has two wires side-by-side embedded in insulating material?

  • A) Coaxial cable
  • B) Waveguide
  • C) Open-wire line
  • D) Window line

B-006-002-003: What kind of transmission line is made of two conductors held apart by insulated rods?

  • A) Twisted pair
  • B) Open-wire line
  • C) Coaxial cable
  • D) Window line

B-006-002-004: What is the purpose of a balun?

  • A) Connect balanced and unbalanced systems
  • B) Increase antenna gain
  • C) Shunt common-mode current to ground
  • D) Balance antenna impedance

B-006-002-005: Where would you install a balun to feed a dipole antenna with 50-ohm coaxial cable?

  • A) Between the transmitter and the coaxial cable
  • B) Between the antenna and the ground
  • C) Between the coaxial cable and the ground
  • D) Between the coaxial cable and the antenna

B-006-002-006: What causes a transmission line to be unbalanced?

  • A) The conductors have deteriorated insulation
  • B) One conductor is connected to ground
  • C) The conductors are twisted together
  • D) One conductor has a poor connection at the antenna

B-006-002-007: What device can be installed to feed a balanced antenna with an unbalanced transmission line?

  • A) A wave trap
  • B) A loading coil
  • C) A balun
  • D) A triaxial transformer

B-006-002-008: What device should you use to connect a coaxial cable to window line?

  • A) A phasing harness
  • B) A tuning stub
  • C) A balun
  • D) A surge suppressor

B-006-002-009: A balanced transmission line:

  • A) carries RF current on one wire only
  • B) is made of one conductor only
  • C) is made of two parallel wires
  • D) has one conductor inside the other

B-006-002-010: Your antenna tuner does not have a balanced output and you wish to use window line to feed an HF antenna. What device should you use between the tuner and the transmission line?

  • A) Autotransformer
  • B) Balun
  • C) Transmission line stub
  • D) Quarter-wave transformer

B-006-002-011: What kind of transmission line has two conductors maintained side by side, a constant distance apart, using insulated spreaders?

  • A) Twisted pair
  • B) Open-wire line
  • C) Coaxial cable
  • D) Twin-lead

6.3 Connectors B-006-003

Connectors are the weak links in any antenna system. A corroded or poorly installed connector can waste more power than a hundred feet of cable. Knowing which connector to use for each situation -- and maintaining them properly -- is essential for a well-functioning station.

There are four main RF connector types you need to know for the exam. Each is designed for a different use case, and they differ in size, weather resistance, and frequency range.

ConnectorAlso Known AsPrimary UseKey Feature
PL-259 / SO-239 UHF connector HF transceivers, RG-213 cable Most common HF connector; PL-259 is plug, SO-239 is socket
SMA SubMiniature-A Hand-held transceivers (HTs) Small, threaded; standard on modern HTs
BNC Bayonet Neill-Concelman Low-power transceivers, test instruments Quick-connect bayonet locking; reliable at VHF
N-type N connector VHF/UHF, outdoor/tower installations Moisture resistant; best weatherproofing
"SMA = SMAll (handhelds), BNC = BeNChtop (test equipment), N = No moisture (weatherproof), PL-259 = PLug for HF"

Proximity to Metal and Environmental Concerns

If a transmission line must be supported by attaching it to a metal fence for several metres, coaxial cable will NOT be adversely affected by proximity to the fence because its shield confines the fields inside the cable. Open-wire and window line would have their impedance disrupted by nearby metal. In locations frequently affected by icing, coaxial cable is again the most suitable transmission line because ice cannot bridge its conductors (they are sealed inside). Open-wire and window lines can short out when ice forms between the conductors.

Coaxial Cable Construction Details

A common-mode current choke can be made by winding coaxial cable on a ferrite toroid. Cable with solid dielectric is preferred over foam dielectric for this purpose because there is less risk of a short due to centre conductor movement when the cable is bent tightly around the toroid.

Why do most amateur radio antenna systems use coaxial cable rather than other types of transmission line? Because coax is more usable in a wide variety of settings -- it can be buried, run along metal structures, bent around corners, and easily terminated with standard connectors.

The type of coaxial outer conductor that offers the best shielding is a solid shield (sometimes called solid copper tube or hardline). Double-braid is second best, followed by single-braid. The primary advantage of coaxial cable with a foam dielectric (vs. solid) is lower loss, because foam has a lower dielectric constant and a higher velocity factor.

You should regularly clean and tighten all antenna connectors to keep their contact resistance at a minimum. Corroded or loose connectors waste power as heat and can cause erratic SWR readings.
Which RF connector is designed to be moisture resistant for outdoor use? The N-type connector.
Practice Questions: B-006-003 -- Connectors

B-006-003-001: A transmission line must be supported for several metres by attaching it to a metal fence. What type of transmission line will NOT be adversely affected by proximity to the fence?

  • A) Coaxial cable
  • B) Twin-lead
  • C) Open-wire line
  • D) Window line

B-006-003-002: A common-mode current choke can be made by winding coaxial cable on a ferrite toroid. Why is cable with solid dielectric preferred over foam dielectric?

  • A) More impedance to common-mode current
  • B) Less risk of a short due to centre conductor movement
  • C) Less impedance inserted in the signal path
  • D) More flexible and easier to handle

B-006-003-003: Why do most amateur radio antenna systems use coaxial cable, rather than other types of transmission line?

  • A) Less loss
  • B) More power handling capability
  • C) Less expensive
  • D) More usable in a wide variety of settings

B-006-003-004: What type of connector is commonly installed on RG-213 coaxial cable for connection to an HF transceiver?

  • A) A BNC connector
  • B) A PL-259 connector
  • C) An F-type connector
  • D) An SMA connector

B-006-003-005: What type of connector usually joins a modern hand-held transceiver to its antenna?

  • A) An RCA connector
  • B) An SMA connector
  • C) A PL-259 connector
  • D) An F-type connector

B-006-003-006: Which popular RF connector is designed to be moisture resistant?

  • A) UHF
  • B) BNC
  • C) SMA
  • D) N

B-006-003-007: What type of RF connector is commonly used for low-power transceivers and test instruments?

  • A) RCA
  • B) BNC
  • C) N
  • D) UHF

B-006-003-008: Why should you regularly clean and tighten all antenna connectors?

  • A) To minimize dielectric losses
  • B) To maintain lightning protection
  • C) To prevent static electricity buildup
  • D) To help keep their contact resistance at a minimum

B-006-003-009: What type of coaxial outer conductor offers the best shielding?

  • A) Single braided shield
  • B) Double braided shield
  • C) Solid shield
  • D) Aluminum foil

B-006-003-010: If your location is frequently affected by icing conditions, which type of transmission line would be the most suitable?

  • A) Coaxial cable
  • B) Open-wire line
  • C) Window line
  • D) Twin-lead

B-006-003-011: What is the primary advantage of choosing a coaxial cable with a foam dielectric instead of a solid dielectric?

  • A) Better mechanical stability
  • B) Lower loss
  • C) Higher power handling
  • D) Lower velocity factor

6.4 Transmission Line Losses B-006-004

No transmission line is perfect -- every metre of cable absorbs some of your precious RF power and converts it to heat. Understanding what causes loss, and how to minimize it, can mean the difference between a strong signal and a weak one.
Transmission line loss is like friction in a pipe. A longer pipe means more friction; a narrower pipe has more friction than a wider one. Similarly, longer cables and thinner cables lose more signal. And just as turbulent water loses more energy than smooth flow, higher frequencies lose more energy than lower ones.

RF transmission line losses are expressed in decibels per unit length (e.g., dB per 100 feet or dB per 100 metres). This makes it easy to calculate total loss for any cable run: simply multiply the loss-per-unit-length by the actual length.

Effect of Cable Length

Signal loss increases as the length increases -- the relationship is directly proportional. If you double the length of a coaxial transmission line from 20 metres to 40 metres, the loss increases by 100% (it doubles).

Your transmitter and antenna are 15 metres apart, but you have 60 metres of RG-58 coaxial cable connecting them. What should you do to reduce transmission line loss? Shorten the excess cable. Do not coil it up -- just cut it to the length you need. Extra cable means extra loss, period.

Effect of Frequency

Signal loss in a transmission line increases with increasing frequency. This is why cable that works fine on HF may have unacceptable loss at UHF. As the operating frequency increases, loss increases due to internal line losses -- specifically the skin effect (current crowds onto the surface of the conductor at high frequencies) and dielectric losses.

Cable Type Comparison

Using RG-58 (thin coax) on the 70 cm band (UHF, ~430 MHz) leads to excess RF loss in the transmission line. Thinner cable has inherently higher loss, and this becomes severe at high frequencies. Changing from RG-213 to RG-58 (same length) means less RF power is radiated from the antenna. RG-58 has roughly 2-3 times the loss per unit length of RG-213.

Cable TypeImpedanceDiameterRelative LossBest For
RG-58 50 ohms ~5 mm High Short runs, low power, HF only
RG-213 50 ohms ~10 mm Moderate General HF/VHF station use
LMR-400 50 ohms ~10 mm Low VHF/UHF, longer runs
Twin-lead 300 ohms Flat ribbon Lower than coax TV antennas (legacy), balanced feeds
Window line 300-450 ohms ~25 mm wide Very low HF balanced antenna feeds
Open-wire 450-600 ohms Variable Lowest HF antenna feeds, high-SWR operation
The lowest loss transmission line on HF is open-wire line. It can have losses as low as 0.1 dB per 100 feet, compared to 1-2 dB for coax at the same frequency. Its major advantage is that it can be operated at high SWR without excessive loss, because even when multiplied by a high SWR, the total loss remains manageable.
If you double the length of a coaxial feed line, what happens to the loss? It doubles (increases by 100%).
Practice Questions: B-006-004 -- Transmission Line Losses

B-006-004-001: What is the major adverse consequence of using RG-58 coaxial cable for a transmission line operating on the 70 cm band?

  • A) Excess reflections at the antenna feed point
  • B) Excess RF radiation from the transmission line
  • C) Excess transmission line heating
  • D) Excess RF loss in the transmission line

B-006-004-002: What is the major advantage of open-wire transmission line?

  • A) It can be operated at high SWR without excessive loss
  • B) It can be located near metal objects without problems
  • C) It has low impedance, which facilitates matching to a transceiver
  • D) It does not radiate RF energy, which could cause interference to nearby equipment

B-006-004-003: If your transmitter and antenna are 15 metres apart, but are connected by 60 metres of RG-58 coaxial cable, what should be done to reduce transmission line loss?

  • A) Install a low-pass filter at the transceiver
  • B) Shorten the excess cable
  • C) Install a balun at the antenna feed point
  • D) Roll the excess cable into a coil

B-006-004-004: As the length of a transmission line is changed, what happens to signal loss?

  • A) Signal loss decreases as the length increases
  • B) Signal loss is the least when the length is the same as the signal's wavelength
  • C) Signal loss is the same for any length of transmission line
  • D) Signal loss increases as the length increases

B-006-004-005: As the frequency of a signal is changed, what happens to signal loss in a transmission line?

  • A) Signal loss increases as the square of the frequency
  • B) Signal loss is the same for any frequency
  • C) Signal loss increases with increasing frequency
  • D) Signal loss increases with decreasing frequency

B-006-004-006: Assuming the same transmitter and RF output power are used, what is the effect of changing the transmission line from RG-213 coaxial cable to RG-58?

  • A) SWR at the antenna increases
  • B) SWR at the antenna decreases
  • C) Less RF power is radiated from the antenna
  • D) More RF power is radiated from the antenna

B-006-004-007: The lowest loss transmission line on HF is:

  • A) open-wire line
  • B) 75-ohm twin-lead
  • C) coaxial cable
  • D) 300-ohm twin-lead

B-006-004-008: In what values are RF transmission line losses expressed?

  • A) Ohms per metre
  • B) Decibel per unit length
  • C) Ohms per MHz
  • D) Decibel per MHz

B-006-004-009: If the length of a coaxial transmission line is increased from 20 metres to 40 metres, how would this affect the line loss?

  • A) It would be increased by 20%
  • B) It would be increased by 100%
  • C) It would be increased by 50%
  • D) It would be increased by 10%

B-006-004-010: If the operating frequency is increased, how does the transmission line loss change?

  • A) Loss decreases, due to decreased SWR
  • B) Loss increases, due to internal line losses
  • C) Loss increases, due to increased wave velocity
  • D) Loss decreases, due to skin effect

6.5 Standing Wave Ratio (SWR) B-006-005

SWR is the most commonly discussed measurement in amateur radio station setup. It tells you how well your antenna system accepts power from the transmitter. A low SWR means efficient power transfer; a high SWR means power is being wasted as reflections bounce back and forth in your feed line.
SWR is like an echo. When you shout in a canyon and the sound bounces back, that is wasted energy. When your antenna does not match the transmission line, RF energy bounces back toward the transmitter like an echo bouncing off a wall. A perfect match means no echo -- all energy is absorbed by the antenna.

An SWR reading of 1:1 means the best impedance match has been attained. All forward power is absorbed by the antenna; no power is reflected. This is the ideal. An SWR reading of less than 1.5:1 means a fairly good impedance match -- most transceivers operate happily at or below this level.

How SWR is Measured

An SWR meter measures forward and reflected voltage to determine the SWR. It is placed in series with the transmission line, usually between the transceiver and the antenna feed line. The meter compares the voltage of the signal going toward the antenna with the voltage of the signal reflected back.

What Causes High SWR?

If the characteristic impedance of the transmission line does not match the antenna input impedance, standing waves are produced in the transmission line. A high SWR reading can be caused by an open or short circuit in the antenna system -- broken connections, corroded connectors, or a damaged antenna element. Erratic SWR readings (jumping around unpredictably) are most likely caused by an intermittent connection in the antenna system -- a loose connector, corroded joint, or broken wire that makes and breaks contact in the wind.

Effects of High SWR

The main adverse effect of high SWR is increased transmission line loss. Reflected power travels back and forth in the cable, being attenuated each time -- more power is wasted as heat in the cable. Standing waves on a transmission line result in reduced transfer of RF energy to the antenna.

Line loss masks SWR readings at the station because reflected energy is attenuated on its way back to the meter. A lossy cable can make a terrible mismatch look acceptable! This is why a "good" SWR reading on a long, lossy cable does not necessarily mean the antenna is well matched.

Antenna Analyzer

An antenna analyzer is the instrument most useful for adjusting the physical length of an antenna. It shows SWR, impedance, and resonant frequency without needing to transmit. An antenna analyzer provides the SWR of the antenna system over a range of frequencies, helping you find the resonant point and evaluate bandwidth.

What does an SWR reading of 1:1 mean? A perfect impedance match -- all power is absorbed by the antenna with zero reflection.
Practice Questions: B-006-005 -- Standing Wave Ratio (SWR)

B-006-005-001: What does an SWR reading of 1:1 mean?

  • A) An antenna tuner is needed at the transmitter
  • B) The best impedance match has been attained
  • C) Reflected power equals forward power
  • D) An impedance transformer is needed at the antenna feed point

B-006-005-002: What does an SWR reading of less than 1.5:1 mean?

  • A) An impedance match that is too low
  • B) A serious impedance mismatch, something may be wrong with the antenna system
  • C) An antenna gain of 1.5
  • D) A fairly good impedance match

B-006-005-003: What is the most likely cause of erratic readings on an SWR meter?

  • A) Interference from electrical power lines
  • B) Lack of a balun at the antenna feed point
  • C) Intermittent connection in the antenna system
  • D) Transmitting into the wrong antenna

B-006-005-004: Which of the following can cause a high SWR reading?

  • A) Replacing RG-213 coaxial cable with RG-58
  • B) An open or short circuit in the antenna system
  • C) Grounding the shield of the coaxial cable at the building entrance
  • D) Using a very long transmission line

B-006-005-005: What is the main adverse effect due to operating with high SWR?

  • A) Increased transmission line loss
  • B) Increased receive noise level
  • C) Increased transmission line radiation
  • D) Increased common-mode current

B-006-005-006: What instrument is useful in adjusting the physical length of an antenna?

  • A) Frequency meter
  • B) Antenna analyzer
  • C) Multimeter
  • D) Capacitance meter

B-006-005-007: If the characteristic impedance of the transmission line does not match the antenna input impedance then:

  • A) heat is produced at the junction
  • B) the SWR reading falls to 1:1
  • C) the antenna will not radiate any signal
  • D) standing waves are produced in the transmission line

B-006-005-008: The result of the presence of standing waves on a transmission line is:

  • A) reduced transfer of RF energy to the antenna
  • B) perfect impedance match between transmitter and transmission line
  • C) maximum transfer of energy to the antenna from the transmitter
  • D) lack of radiation from the transmission line

B-006-005-009: What does an SWR meter measure to determine the SWR?

  • A) Forward and reflected voltage
  • B) Radiated RF energy
  • C) Conductor temperature
  • D) Common-mode current

B-006-005-010: What information can be obtained with an antenna analyzer?

  • A) Gain of the antenna
  • B) Front-to-back ratio of the antenna
  • C) SWR of the antenna system over a range of frequencies
  • D) Radiation pattern of the antenna

B-006-005-011: What is the effect of line loss on the SWR reading at the station?

  • A) It decreases the SWR, because reflected energy is attenuated
  • B) It decreases the SWR, because less power reaches the antenna
  • C) It has no effect, because SWR compares voltages
  • D) It has no effect, because forward and reflected power are both affected

6.6 Antenna Tuners B-006-006

In a perfect world, every antenna would present exactly 50 ohms to the transceiver on every frequency. In practice, antennas are rarely a perfect match across their entire range. An antenna tuner bridges this gap, transforming whatever impedance the antenna system presents into the 50 ohms your radio expects.
An antenna tuner is like an adapter plug for international travel. Your appliance (transceiver) expects one "shape" of impedance, and the foreign outlet (antenna system) has a different one. The adapter (tuner) makes them compatible so power flows smoothly.

An antenna tuner matches a transceiver to a mismatched antenna system. It transforms the impedance seen at the end of the feed line to the 50 ohms the transceiver expects. Without a tuner, excessive impedance mismatch between transceiver and transmission line will cause a modern solid-state HF transceiver to automatically reduce power (fold-back) to protect its output transistors.

How It Works

An antenna tuner compensates for impedance mismatch by adding capacitive or inductive reactance using variable capacitors and inductors. These components cancel out the reactive component of the impedance and transform the resistive component to 50 ohms. For maximum power delivery when both source and load impedances are purely resistive, the load impedance should equal the source impedance -- this is the maximum power transfer theorem.

An end-fed half-wave antenna (EFHW) has a very high feed point impedance. A transformer can provide a good match to 50-ohm coaxial cable. A transformer for impedance matching at radio frequencies can be designed to work over a wide bandwidth, making it versatile for multi-band operation.

Tuner Placement

The advantage of locating an antenna tuner near the antenna feed point (rather than at the transceiver) is less transmission line loss. When the tuner is at the antenna, the coax between the tuner and transceiver carries matched (low SWR) power, minimizing loss. Impedance matching should be done at the junction between the transmission line and antenna to minimize transmission line losses.

If an antenna is correctly matched to a transmission line, the length of the line will have no effect on the matching. Line length only matters when there is a mismatch.

An antenna tuner (external or internal) is frequently used with modern solid-state transceivers because it enables the transceiver to deliver rated power to a mismatched antenna system without triggering the protective power foldback.

Impedance Transformation Ratio

If a 50-ohm line feeds a folded dipole with a feed point impedance close to 300 ohms, the impedance transformation ratio needed is 6:1 (300 / 50 = 6).

$$\text{Impedance Ratio} = \frac{Z_{\text{load}}}{Z_{\text{line}}} = \frac{300\,\Omega}{50\,\Omega} = 6:1$$
Worked Example: Calculating Impedance Transformation Ratio

Problem: A transmission line with characteristic impedance of 50 ohms feeds a folded dipole with a feed point impedance close to 300 ohms. What impedance transformation ratio is needed?

Step 1: Identify the values: Zload = 300 ohms, Zline = 50 ohms.

Step 2: Calculate the ratio:

$$\frac{300}{50} = 6$$

Answer: A 6:1 impedance transformation ratio is needed.

Where should an antenna tuner be placed to minimize feed line loss? Near the antenna feed point, so the coax back to the shack carries matched power.
Practice Questions: B-006-006 -- Antenna Tuners

B-006-006-001: Which of the following antenna system conditions will cause a modern solid-state HF transceiver to automatically reduce power?

  • A) Open circuit in lightning surge protector ground connection
  • B) Excessive antenna element movement in high winds
  • C) Excessive impedance mismatch between transceiver and transmission line
  • D) Transmitting to a balanced antenna with an unbalanced transmission line

B-006-006-002: What does an antenna tuner do?

  • A) It matches a transceiver to a mismatched antenna system
  • B) It helps a receiver automatically tune in stations that are far away
  • C) It switches an antenna system to a transmitter when sending, and to a receiver when listening
  • D) It switches multiple transceivers to a common transmission line and antenna

B-006-006-003: An end-fed half-wave antenna (EFHW) has a very high feed point impedance. What device could be used to provide a good match to 50-ohm coaxial cable?

  • A) A counterpoise
  • B) A good ground on the coax shield
  • C) A transformer
  • D) A quarter-wave stub

B-006-006-004: If both source and load impedances are purely resistive, what value of load impedance will result in maximum power delivery to the load?

  • A) Load impedance equal to half of the source impedance
  • B) Load impedance equal to twice the source impedance
  • C) Load impedance equal to the square root of source impedance
  • D) Load impedance equal to the source impedance

B-006-006-005: What is the advantage of locating an antenna tuner near the antenna feed point, over locating it near the transceiver?

  • A) Less atmospheric noise pickup
  • B) More usable bandwidth
  • C) Less transmission line loss
  • D) More harmonic suppression

B-006-006-006: How does an antenna tuner compensate for an impedance mismatch in an antenna system?

  • A) By diverting reflections to a dummy load
  • B) By increasing the conductance of the transmission line
  • C) By adjusting the resonant frequency of the antenna
  • D) By adding capacitive or inductive reactance

B-006-006-007: What advantage does a transformer present when used for impedance matching at radio frequencies?

  • A) It can be designed to do so over a wide bandwidth
  • B) It supports larger power than reactive components
  • C) It provides constant voltage to the load
  • D) It isolates the source from reflections

B-006-006-008: Where does impedance matching need to be done to minimize transmission line losses in an antenna system?

  • A) At the junction between the transmission line and antenna
  • B) At the junction between the transmitter and the transmission line
  • C) Anywhere along the transmission line
  • D) At a quarter wavelength from the transmitter

B-006-006-009: If an antenna is correctly matched to a transmission line, the length of the transmission line:

  • A) must be an even number of half-wavelengths
  • B) will have no effect on the matching
  • C) must be a full wavelength long
  • D) must be an odd number of quarter-wavelengths

B-006-006-010: Why is an antenna tuner (external or internal) frequently used with modern solid-state transceivers?

  • A) It reduces losses in the line to the antenna
  • B) It reduces common-mode noise pickup
  • C) It absorbs the reflected energy from a mismatched antenna system
  • D) It enables the transceivers to deliver rated power to a mismatched antenna system

B-006-006-011: If a transmission line with a characteristic impedance of 50 ohms feeds a folded dipole with a feed point impedance close to 300 ohms, what impedance transformation ratio is needed to match the two?

  • A) 2:1
  • B) 4:1
  • C) 9:1
  • D) 6:1

6.7 Polarization B-006-007

Radio waves are electromagnetic waves, and like light, they have a specific orientation called polarization. The polarization of your antenna determines the polarization of the waves it transmits -- and matching polarization between the transmitting and receiving stations can make a 20 dB difference in signal strength.

Polarization refers to the orientation of the electric field of a radio wave relative to the Earth's surface. Horizontal polarization means the electric lines of force are parallel to the Earth's surface. Vertical polarization means the electric lines of force are perpendicular to the Earth's surface. The polarization of an antenna is determined by the orientation of the electric field relative to the Earth's surface.

  HORIZONTAL POLARIZATION            VERTICAL POLARIZATION

  Electric field (E)                 Electric field (E)
  ------------------->                       ^
  ------------------->                       |
  ------------------->                       |
  ===================== Ground         ===================== Ground
  (E-field parallel to ground)       (E-field perpendicular to ground)

  Antenna orientation:               Antenna orientation:
  |==================|                       |
  (horizontal dipole)                        |
                                             |
                                      (vertical whip)
Polarization is determined by the orientation of the electric field

A horizontal dipole produces horizontally polarized waves. A vertical antenna produces vertically polarized waves. A dipole antenna will emit a vertically polarized wave if it is mounted vertically. A Yagi antenna with its elements parallel to the Earth's surface produces horizontal electromagnetic wave polarization. A half-wavelength antenna perpendicular to the Earth's surface has vertical electromagnetic wave polarization.

Isotropic Radiator

An isotropic antenna (isotropic radiator) is a hypothetical point source that radiates equally in all directions. It does not exist in practice but serves as a reference for measuring antenna gain. The three-dimensional radiation pattern of an isotropic radiator is a sphere -- equal radiation intensity in every direction.

Matching Polarization

VHF signals from a mobile station using a vertical whip antenna will normally be best received using a vertical ground-plane antenna. Matching polarization maximizes signal transfer. Compared with a horizontal antenna, a vertical antenna will receive a vertically polarized radio wave at higher strength -- matching polarization can provide 20 dB or more advantage.

If a vertically polarized wave travels by ground wave to the receiver, its final polarization remains vertical. Ground wave propagation preserves polarization.
What determines whether a dipole antenna produces horizontally or vertically polarized waves? Its mounting orientation -- horizontal mounting produces horizontal polarization, vertical mounting produces vertical polarization.
Practice Questions: B-006-007 -- Polarization

B-006-007-001: What does horizontal wave polarization mean?

  • A) The electric lines of force of a radio wave are parallel to the Earth's surface
  • B) The electric and magnetic lines of force of a radio wave are perpendicular to the Earth's surface
  • C) The electric lines of force of a radio wave are perpendicular to the Earth's surface
  • D) The magnetic lines of force of a radio wave are parallel to the Earth's surface

B-006-007-002: What does vertical wave polarization mean?

  • A) The electric lines of force of a radio wave are parallel to the Earth's surface
  • B) The electric lines of force of a radio wave are perpendicular to the Earth's surface
  • C) The magnetic lines of force of a radio wave are perpendicular to the Earth's surface
  • D) The electric and magnetic lines of force of a radio wave are parallel to the Earth's surface

B-006-007-003: What electromagnetic wave polarization does a Yagi antenna have when its elements are parallel to the Earth's surface?

  • A) Vertical
  • B) Circular
  • C) Horizontal
  • D) Elliptical

B-006-007-004: What electromagnetic wave polarization does a half-wavelength antenna have when it is perpendicular to the Earth's surface?

  • A) Horizontal
  • B) Elliptical
  • C) Vertical
  • D) Circular

B-006-007-005: Polarization of an antenna is determined by:

  • A) the orientation of the magnetic field relative to the Earth's surface
  • B) the orientation of the electric field relative to the magnetic field
  • C) the orientation of the electric field relative to the Earth's surface
  • D) the orientation of the electric field relative to the transmission line

B-006-007-006: An isotropic antenna is:

  • A) a hypothetical point source
  • B) an infinitely long piece of wire
  • C) a dummy load
  • D) a half-wave reference dipole

B-006-007-007: What is the three-dimensional radiation pattern of an isotropic radiator?

  • A) A hemisphere
  • B) A sphere
  • C) A torus (donut shape)
  • D) A cardioid

B-006-007-008: VHF signals from a mobile station using a vertical whip antenna will normally be best received using a:

  • A) horizontal ground-plane antenna
  • B) horizontal dipole antenna
  • C) vertical ground-plane antenna
  • D) random length of wire

B-006-007-009: A dipole antenna will emit a vertically polarized wave if it is:

  • A) very high above ground
  • B) mounted vertically
  • C) mounted horizontally
  • D) too near to the ground

B-006-007-010: If an electromagnetic wave leaves an antenna vertically polarized and reaches the receiving location by ground wave, what will be its final polarization?

  • A) Vertical
  • B) Oblique
  • C) Horizontal
  • D) Circular

B-006-007-011: Compared with a horizontal antenna, a vertical antenna will receive a vertically polarized radio wave:

  • A) at higher strength
  • B) at lower strength
  • C) at about the same strength
  • D) at a strength depending on the height above ground

6.8 Antenna Fundamentals B-006-008

Before diving into specific antenna types, you need to understand the fundamental relationship between frequency and wavelength, and how an antenna's physical length determines the frequencies it can work on. These core concepts underpin every antenna calculation on the exam.

The Wavelength Formula

Radio waves travel at the speed of light: 300,000 kilometres per second. The speed of a radio wave is the same as the speed of light -- this is a fundamental property of all electromagnetic waves, and it is constant regardless of frequency. The relationship between wavelength and frequency is:

$$\lambda = \frac{300}{f_{\text{MHz}}}$$
where \(\lambda\) = wavelength in metres, \(f\) = frequency in MHz
Worked Example: Wavelength of a 25 MHz Signal

Problem: What is the wavelength in free space of a 25 MHz signal?

$$\lambda = \frac{300}{25} = 12 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 12 metres. (B-006-008-003)

Worked Example: Wavelength of a 2 MHz Signal

Problem: What is the wavelength in free space of a 2 MHz signal?

$$\lambda = \frac{300}{2} = 150 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 150 metres. (B-006-008-011)

Resonant Frequency and Antenna Length

An antenna's resonant frequency is determined by its physical (electrical) length. There is an inverse relationship: longer antenna = lower frequency; shorter antenna = higher frequency. To change a wire dipole's resonant frequency from 3900 kHz down to 3600 kHz (lower), make it longer. To change from 3600 kHz up to 3900 kHz (higher), make it shorter. The resonant frequency of an antenna may be increased by shortening the radiating element, and lowered by lengthening it.

"Longer = Lower, Shorter = higher" -- both start with the same letters.

Loading Coils

Adding a series inductance (loading coil) to an antenna decreases the resonant frequency. The coil makes the antenna electrically longer without being physically longer. This is particularly useful for mobile antennas where physical length is limited.

Traps

A trap is a coil and capacitor in parallel (a parallel LC circuit). Traps are inserted in antenna elements to block current at specific frequencies, allowing one antenna to operate on multiple bands. At the trap's resonant frequency, it presents high impedance, effectively "disconnecting" the wire beyond it. Below the trap frequency, current flows through to the full length.

  TRAP IN AN ANTENNA ELEMENT

     <---- Wire ----| TRAP |---- Wire ---->

                    +--||--+
     Detail:   -----+      +-----
                    +-)()(--+
                     C     L
                  (Parallel LC circuit)

  At the trap's resonant frequency, it presents high impedance,
  effectively "disconnecting" the wire beyond it.
  Below the trap frequency, current flows through to the full length.
A trap is a parallel LC circuit inserted in an antenna element for multi-band operation

Insulators

Insulators at the ends of a suspended wire antenna serve to limit the electrical length of the antenna. They define where the antenna element ends and the support rope begins, preventing current from flowing onto the support structure.

To lower an antenna's resonant frequency, do you make it longer or shorter? Longer. Remember: Longer = Lower frequency.
Practice Questions: B-006-008 -- Antenna Fundamentals

B-006-008-001: A wire dipole has a resonant frequency of 3900 kHz. How can you change its resonant frequency to 3600 kHz?

  • A) Make it longer
  • B) Make it shorter
  • C) Install it as a sloper
  • D) Use smaller diameter wire

B-006-008-002: A wire dipole has a resonant frequency of 3600 kHz. How can you change its resonant frequency to 3900 kHz?

  • A) Make it shorter
  • B) Make it longer
  • C) Install it as a sloper
  • D) Use larger diameter wire

B-006-008-003: What is the wavelength in free space of a 25 MHz signal?

  • A) 12 metres
  • B) 19 metres
  • C) 39 metres
  • D) 6 metres

B-006-008-004: The velocity of propagation of radio frequency energy in free space is:

  • A) 200 000 kilometres per second
  • B) 150 000 kilometres per second
  • C) 186 000 kilometres per second
  • D) 300 000 kilometres per second

B-006-008-005: Adding a series inductance to an antenna would:

  • A) increase the resonant frequency
  • B) increase its useful bandwidth
  • C) reduce atmospheric noise pickup
  • D) decrease the resonant frequency

B-006-008-006: The resonant frequency of an antenna may be increased by:

  • A) lowering the radiating element
  • B) increasing the height of the radiating element
  • C) lengthening the radiating element
  • D) shortening the radiating element

B-006-008-007: The speed of a radio wave:

  • A) is constant
  • B) is less than half the speed of light
  • C) varies depending on the frequency
  • D) is the same as the speed of light

B-006-008-008: Why are insulators used at the ends of a suspended wire antenna?

  • A) To limit the electrical length of the antenna
  • B) To decrease the effective antenna length
  • C) To increase the antenna bandwidth
  • D) To reduce capacitive coupling with the ground

B-006-008-009: To lower the resonant frequency of an antenna, the operator should:

  • A) use smaller diameter wire
  • B) lengthen the transmission line
  • C) lengthen it
  • D) shorten it

B-006-008-010: Some antennas are constructed with traps. What is a trap?

  • A) A coil and capacitor in parallel
  • B) A large wire-wound resistor
  • C) A coil wrapped around a ferrite rod
  • D) A hollow metal can

B-006-008-011: What is the wavelength in free space of a 2 MHz signal?

  • A) 30 metres
  • B) 150 metres
  • C) 360 metres
  • D) 1500 metres

6.9 Antenna Gain & Directivity B-006-009

Antennas do not create power -- but they can concentrate the power they have in a preferred direction. This focusing effect is called gain, and it is one of the most important performance characteristics of any antenna. A high-gain antenna is like a flashlight beam compared to a bare bulb: the same energy, but focused where you need it.

Antenna gain is the ratio of the radiated signal strength of an antenna to that of a reference antenna (usually an isotropic radiator or a dipole). Gain does not create power -- it focuses existing power in a preferred direction. Antenna gain, especially on VHF and above, is quoted in dBi. The "i" stands for isotropic -- gain relative to an isotropic radiator.

The approximate gain of a half-wave dipole in free space relative to an isotropic radiator is 2.1 dB (2.1 dBi). This means a dipole concentrates 2.1 dB more signal broadside than an isotropic radiator would with the same power.
Worked Example: Converting dBi to dBd (Gain Over Dipole)

Problem: An antenna has a gain of 4.1 dBi. How much gain is this over a half-wave dipole?

Step 1: A half-wave dipole has 2.1 dBi gain.

Step 2: Subtract the dipole's gain from the antenna's gain:

$$4.1 \text{ dBi} - 2.1 \text{ dBi} = 2.0 \text{ dB over a dipole (dBd)}$$

Answer: 2.0 dB gain over a dipole. (B-006-009-011)

Parasitic Elements

A parasitic antenna element is energized by induction or radiation from a driven element. It has no direct electrical connection to the transmission line. The directivity of a half-wave dipole can be increased by adding one or more parasitic elements -- this is how a Yagi-Uda antenna is created.

Directors and Reflectors

Adding a slightly shorter parasitic element (a director) to a dipole increases radiation strength from the dipole towards the new element. The director "pulls" the pattern toward itself. Adding a slightly longer parasitic element (a reflector) increases radiation strength from the new element towards the dipole. The reflector "pushes" the pattern away from itself.

"Directors are shorter and Direct the signal forward. Reflectors are longer and Reflect the signal forward." Think: D for Director, D for Dinky (shorter). R for Reflector, R for Rotund (longer).

Bandwidth

The property of an antenna that defines the range of frequencies to which it will respond is called its bandwidth. Antenna bandwidth is the frequency range over which the antenna may be expected to perform well (typically defined as SWR below 2:1).

Dipole Radiation Pattern

In free space, the radiation pattern of a half-wave dipole has maximum radiation broadside from the antenna (perpendicular to the wire), with nulls off the ends. The 3D pattern is a torus (donut shape).

  HALF-WAVE DIPOLE RADIATION PATTERN (Top View)

                    ^ Maximum radiation
                   / \
                  /   \
                 /     \
                /       \
  Null <-----------=====-----------> Null
    (off end)    \  DIPOLE  /     (off end)
                  \       /
                   \     /
                    \   /
                     \ /
                      v Maximum radiation

  3D: Rotate this pattern around the dipole axis
      to get the "donut" (torus) shape.
Top-down view of half-wave dipole radiation pattern
Is a director element shorter or longer than the driven element? Shorter. Directors are shorter and direct the signal forward.
Practice Questions: B-006-009 -- Antenna Gain & Directivity

B-006-009-001: How is a parasitic antenna element energized?

  • A) By inductive coupling from a wave trap
  • B) By induction or radiation from a driven element
  • C) By direct connection to a driven element
  • D) By direct connection to the transmission line

B-006-009-002: How can the directivity of a half-wave dipole be increased?

  • A) By adding traps to the radiating element
  • B) By lengthening the radiating element
  • C) By adding one or more parasitic elements
  • D) By using a radiating element with a larger diameter

B-006-009-003: If a half-wave dipole is converted to a Yagi by adding a slightly shorter parasitic element, in what direction(s) does the radiation strength increase?

  • A) In both directions at right angles to the elements
  • B) In both directions parallel to the elements
  • C) From the dipole towards the new element
  • D) From the new element towards the dipole

B-006-009-004: If a half-wave dipole is converted to a Yagi by adding a slightly longer element, in what direction(s) does the radiation strength increase?

  • A) In both directions parallel to the elements
  • B) From the new element towards the dipole
  • C) From the dipole towards the new element
  • D) In both directions at right angles to the elements

B-006-009-005: The property of an antenna that defines the range of frequencies to which it will respond, is called its:

  • A) front-to-back ratio
  • B) beamwidth
  • C) antenna aperture
  • D) bandwidth

B-006-009-006: What is the approximate gain of a half-wave dipole in free space relative to an isotropic radiator?

  • A) 3.0 dB
  • B) 1.0 dB
  • C) 2.1 dB
  • D) 1.5 dB

B-006-009-007: What is meant by antenna gain?

  • A) The ratio of the radiated signal strength of an antenna to that of a reference antenna
  • B) The ratio of the signal in the forward direction to the signal in the back direction
  • C) The ratio of the power radiated by an antenna compared to the transmitter power
  • D) The power amplifier gain minus the transmission line losses

B-006-009-008: What is meant by antenna bandwidth?

  • A) The frequency range over which the antenna may be expected to perform well
  • B) Antenna length divided by the number of elements
  • C) The angle between the half-power radiation points
  • D) The angle formed between two imaginary lines drawn through the ends of the elements

B-006-009-009: In free space, what is the radiation pattern of a half-wave dipole?

  • A) Maximum radiation from the ends of the antenna
  • B) Omnidirectional radiation pattern
  • C) Hemispherical radiation pattern
  • D) Maximum radiation broadside from the antenna

B-006-009-010: The gain of an antenna, especially on VHF and above, is quoted in dBi. The "i" in this expression stands for:

  • A) interpolated
  • B) isotropic
  • C) integral
  • D) N

B-006-009-011: An antenna is said to have a gain of 4.1 dBi. How much gain is this over a half-wave dipole antenna?

  • A) 1.1 dB
  • B) 2.0 dB
  • C) 4.1 dB
  • D) 3.0 dB

6.10 Vertical Antennas B-006-010

Vertical antennas are the workhorses of mobile and portable operation. Their omnidirectional radiation pattern means you do not need to know where the other station is -- the signal goes out equally in all horizontal directions. Whether it is a quarter-wave ground-plane on a rooftop or a loaded whip on a car, understanding vertical antennas is essential.
  QUARTER-WAVE VERTICAL WITH GROUND PLANE

                    ^
                    |
                    |  Vertical radiator
                    |  (quarter wavelength)
                    |
                    |
       -------------+-------------   <-- Feed point
      /      /      |      \      \
     /      /       |       \      \   Radials (quarter wavelength)
    /      /        v        \      \
                 (ground)

   Coax: Centre conductor --> vertical element
         Shield --> radials

  ELEVATED GROUND PLANE              MOBILE VERTICAL WITH LOADING COIL
  (Downward-sloping radials)

         ^                                    ^
         |                                    |  Whip
         |  Radiator                          |
         |                              +---------+
    -----+-----  Feed                   | Loading  |
     \   |   /                          |  Coil    |
      \  |  /   Radials slope           +---------+
       \ | /    ~45 degrees                   |
        \|/     downward                      |  Lower section
         v                              ======+====== Car roof
                                        (roof acts as ground plane)
Quarter-wave vertical antenna configurations

Quarter-Wave Vertical Length Formula

$$L_{\text{quarter-wave}} = \frac{71.3}{f_{\text{MHz}}} \text{ metres}$$

To calculate the approximate length in metres of a quarter-wavelength antenna for frequencies below 30 MHz, divide 71.3 by the operating frequency in MHz. For a half-wave vertical at VHF, use 143/f instead.

Worked Example: Quarter-Wave Vertical for 21.125 MHz

Problem: What is the length of a quarter-wave vertical for 21.125 MHz?

$$L = \frac{71.3}{21.125} = 3.37 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 3.37 metres. (B-006-010-002)

Worked Example: Half-Wave Vertical for 223 MHz

Problem: If you made a half-wavelength vertical antenna for 223 MHz, approximately how long would it be?

$$L = \frac{143}{223} = 0.641 \text{ metres} = 64.1 \text{ cm} \approx 67 \text{ cm}$$

(Using 143/f for a half-wave vertical at VHF.) (B-006-010-003)

Vertical Radiation Pattern

A quarter-wavelength vertical antenna on the roof of a car sends out energy equally well in all horizontal directions (omnidirectional in the horizontal plane). This makes verticals ideal for mobile use where you do not know where the other station is. A five-eighths wavelength vertical antenna is better than a quarter-wavelength vertical for VHF or UHF mobile operations because it has more gain -- the 5/8-wave design concentrates more radiation toward the horizon.

Ground Plane Radials

Downward sloping radials on a ground plane antenna bring the feed point impedance closer to 50 ohms, providing a better match to standard coaxial cable. Horizontal radials give about 36 ohms; drooping them at approximately 45 degrees raises the impedance to about 50 ohms. For an elevated quarter-wave vertical to match a 50-ohm coaxial cable, use downward sloping quarter-wave radials. The best match to the base of a quarter-wave ground-plane antenna comes from 50-ohm coaxial cable (when using drooping radials).

Short Verticals and Loading

A vertical antenna that is only 2 metres long can be made to resonate in the 80-metre band by installing an inductor in series with the antenna. The loading coil adds the missing electrical length. A loading coil is often used with an HF mobile vertical antenna to tune out capacitive reactance -- a short antenna looks capacitive, and the loading coil (inductance) cancels this.

When using a ground-mounted vertical HF antenna, you can reduce ground losses by installing a wire ground system (radials) at the antenna base. More and longer radials reduce ground resistance and increase efficiency.
Why do drooping radials improve the match to 50-ohm coax? Horizontal radials give ~36 ohms impedance; drooping them raises it to ~50 ohms.
Practice Questions: B-006-010 -- Vertical Antennas

B-006-010-001: How do you calculate the approximate length in metres of a quarter-wavelength antenna for use on frequencies below 30 MHz?

  • A) Divide 468 by the operating frequency in MHz
  • B) Divide 300 by the operating frequency in MHz
  • C) Divide 143 by the operating frequency in MHz
  • D) Divide 71.3 by the operating frequency in MHz

B-006-010-002: If you made a quarter-wavelength vertical antenna for 21.125 MHz, approximately how long would it be?

  • A) 6.77 metres
  • B) 3.37 metres
  • C) 3.55 metres
  • D) 7.10 metres

B-006-010-003: If you made a half-wavelength vertical antenna for 223 MHz, approximately how long would it be?

  • A) 135 cm
  • B) 67 cm
  • C) 32 cm
  • D) 105 cm

B-006-010-004: Why is a five-eighths wavelength vertical antenna better than a quarter-wavelength vertical antenna for VHF or UHF mobile operations?

  • A) Because it can handle more power
  • B) Because it has more gain
  • C) Because it has a high radiation angle
  • D) Because it does not require impedance matching

B-006-010-005: If a quarter-wavelength vertical antenna is placed on the roof of a car, in what direction does it send out radio energy?

  • A) It goes out equally well in all horizontal directions
  • B) Most of it goes vertically straight-up
  • C) Most of it goes equally in two opposite directions
  • D) Most of it goes in one direction

B-006-010-006: What is an advantage of downward sloping radials on a ground plane antenna?

  • A) It brings the feed point impedance closer to 50 ohms
  • B) It increases the radiation angle
  • C) It brings the feed point impedance closer to 300 ohms
  • D) It lowers the radiation angle

B-006-010-007: What configuration of radials will match an elevated quarter-wave vertical antenna to a 50-ohm coaxial cable?

  • A) Horizontal quarter-wave radials
  • B) Horizontal half-wave radials
  • C) Upward sloping half-wave radials
  • D) Downward sloping quarter-wave radials

B-006-010-008: Which of the following transmission lines will give the best match to the base of a quarter-wave ground-plane antenna?

  • A) 75-ohm balanced transmission line
  • B) 75-ohm coaxial cable
  • C) 50-ohm coaxial cable
  • D) 300-ohm balanced transmission line

B-006-010-009: How can a vertical antenna, 2 metres in length, be made to resonate in the 80-metre band for mobile use?

  • A) Connect the transmission line shield to the vehicle's chassis
  • B) Install an inductor in series with the antenna
  • C) Use a solid radiating element instead of tubing
  • D) Install a capacitor in series with the antenna

B-006-010-010: Why is a loading coil often used with an HF mobile vertical antenna?

  • A) To tune out capacitive reactance
  • B) To lower the losses
  • C) To lower the Q
  • D) To filter out electrical noise

B-006-010-011: When using a ground mounted vertical HF antenna, what can you do to reduce ground losses?

  • A) Improve the impedance match at the base
  • B) Raise the antenna one eighth of a wavelength
  • C) Install a wire ground system (radials) at the antenna base
  • D) Use an insulator with a higher breakdown voltage

6.11 Yagi Antennas B-006-011

The Yagi-Uda antenna is the most popular directional antenna in amateur radio. With just a few elements on a boom, it provides substantial gain and a focused beam pattern. If you have ever seen a TV antenna on a rooftop, you have seen a Yagi. Understanding how to size and configure one is a core exam topic.
  3-ELEMENT YAGI-UDA ANTENNA (Top View)

  Direction of maximum radiation ------------------->

  REFLECTOR        DRIVEN ELEMENT         DIRECTOR
  (longest)          (fed by coax)        (shortest)
     |                    |                    |
     |                    |                    |
  |==+================|   |   |=============|   |   |==========|
     |                 |==+=================|     |
     |                    |                    |
     |                    |                    |
     |                    |                    |
  ===+====================+====================+===  <-- Boom
     |                    |                    |
                          |
                       Feed point
                     (coax attaches)

  Element lengths for a given frequency f:
  +------------------+------------------------------+
  | Reflector        | ~5% LONGER than driven       |
  | Driven element   | ~half wavelength = 143/f(MHz)|
  | Director         | ~5% SHORTER than driven      |
  +------------------+------------------------------+

  Element spacing: ~0.15 to 0.25 wavelength between elements
  Optimal compromise for 3 elements: 0.20 wavelength spacing
Yagi-Uda antenna showing relative element sizes and direction of radiation

Yagi Element Length Calculations

The driven element of a Yagi is approximately a half wavelength long: \(L = \frac{143}{f_{\text{MHz}}}\) metres. The director is about 5% shorter, and the reflector is about 5% longer.

Worked Example: Yagi Driven Element for 14.0 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of the driven element of a Yagi antenna for 14.0 MHz?

$$L_{\text{driven}} = \frac{143}{14.0} = 10.21 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 10.21 metres. (B-006-011-002)

Worked Example: Director for 21.1 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of the director element of a Yagi antenna for 21.1 MHz?

Step 1: Calculate the driven element length:

$$L_{\text{driven}} = \frac{143}{21.1} = 6.78 \text{ m}$$

Step 2: The director is ~5% shorter:

$$L_{\text{director}} \approx 6.78 \times 0.95 = 6.44 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: Approximately 6.44 metres. (B-006-011-003)

Worked Example: Reflector for 28.1 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of the reflector element of a Yagi antenna for 28.1 MHz?

Step 1: Calculate the driven element length:

$$L_{\text{driven}} = \frac{143}{28.1} = 5.09 \text{ m}$$

Step 2: The reflector is ~5% longer:

$$L_{\text{reflector}} \approx 5.09 \times 1.05 = 5.34 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: Approximately 5.34 metres. (B-006-011-004)

Gain, Spacing, and Performance

Increasing the boom length and adding directors to a Yagi antenna causes gain to increase. More directors means more signal focusing in the forward direction. The major advantage of increasing element spacing on a Yagi antenna is higher gain -- wider spacing (up to about 0.2-0.25 wavelength) allows each element to interact more effectively.

For a three-element Yagi antenna, the approximate element spacing (in wavelengths) that provides the best compromise between gain and front-to-back ratio is 0.20 wavelength.

The bandwidth of a Yagi antenna can be increased by increasing the diameter of the elements. Fatter elements have a broader frequency response.

Front-to-Back Ratio

Antenna front-to-back ratio is the ratio of the power radiated in the forward direction to the power radiated in the opposite direction. A high front-to-back ratio means the antenna strongly rejects signals from behind.

Why Yagis on HF?

Yagi antennas are often used on HF bands from 20 metres to 10 metres because rotatable high-gain antennas become feasible due to shorter element lengths. At lower frequencies (40m, 80m), the elements become impractically large for rotatable installations.

Multi-Band Yagis and Stacking

A single Yagi antenna can function on the 20-metre, 15-metre, and 10-metre bands by using element traps. Traps electrically shorten the elements at higher frequencies. If the forward gain of a six-element Yagi is about 10 dBi, stacking two of them yields approximately 13 dBi. Stacking adds about 3 dB (doubling the effective aperture).

$$\text{Stacking gain} \approx G_{\text{single}} + 3 \text{ dB} = 10 + 3 = 13 \text{ dBi}$$
What is the optimal element spacing for a 3-element Yagi? 0.20 wavelength -- the best compromise between gain and front-to-back ratio.
Practice Questions: B-006-011 -- Yagi Antennas

B-006-011-001: What design feature allows a single Yagi antenna to function on the 20-metre, 15-metre and 10-metre bands?

  • A) Multiple reflector elements
  • B) T-match feed circuit
  • C) Element traps
  • D) Large diameter elements

B-006-011-002: What is the approximate length of the driven element of a Yagi antenna for 14.0 MHz?

  • A) 10.21 metres
  • B) 5.09 metres
  • C) 10.71 metres
  • D) 21.43 metres

B-006-011-003: What is the approximate length of the director element of a Yagi antenna for 21.1 MHz?

  • A) 3.55 metres
  • B) 6.44 metres
  • C) 7.11 metres
  • D) 3.38 metres

B-006-011-004: What is the approximate length of the reflector element of a Yagi antenna for 28.1 MHz?

  • A) 2.54 metres
  • B) 2.67 metres
  • C) 5.34 metres
  • D) 10.68 metres

B-006-011-005: What is one effect of increasing the boom length and adding directors to a Yagi antenna?

  • A) Gain increases
  • B) Front-to-back ratio increases
  • C) Beamwidth increases
  • D) Power handling capability increases

B-006-011-006: What is the major advantage of increasing element spacing on a Yagi antenna?

  • A) Wider bandwidth
  • B) Higher gain
  • C) Better front-to-back ratio
  • D) Lower feed point impedance

B-006-011-007: Why are Yagi antennas often used on HF bands from 20 metres to 10 metres?

  • A) Rotatable high-gain antennas become feasible due to shorter element lengths
  • B) Excellent omnidirectional coverage in the horizontal plane
  • C) Their wide bandwidth provides a good match over an entire band
  • D) Their high angle of radiation facilitates long-range communications

B-006-011-008: What does "antenna front-to-back ratio" mean in reference to a Yagi antenna?

  • A) The ratio of the power radiated by the director element, to the power radiated by the reflector element
  • B) The ratio of the length of the director element, to the length of the reflector element
  • C) The ratio of the driven element-to-director spacing, to the driven element-to-reflector spacing
  • D) The ratio of the power radiated in the forward direction to the power radiated in the opposite direction

B-006-011-009: How can the bandwidth of a Yagi antenna be increased?

  • A) Decrease the element spacing
  • B) Install loading coils in the elements
  • C) Use tapered elements
  • D) Increase the diameter of the elements

B-006-011-010: For a three-element Yagi antenna, what approximate element spacing (in wavelengths) provides the best compromise between gain and front-to-back ratio?

  • A) 0.20
  • B) 0.10
  • C) 0.50
  • D) 0.75

B-006-011-011: If the forward gain of a six-element Yagi is about 10 dBi, what would the gain of two of these antennas be if they were "stacked"?

  • A) 10 dBi
  • B) 13 dBi
  • C) 7 dBi
  • D) 20 dBi

6.12 Dipole Antennas B-006-012

The half-wave dipole is the most fundamental antenna in amateur radio. Simple, effective, and inexpensive, it is often the first antenna a new ham builds. Understanding its length formula, impedance, radiation pattern, and variants is essential for both the exam and practical station setup.
  HALF-WAVE DIPOLE ANTENNA

        Insulator          Feed point           Insulator
           |              (centre-fed)              |
           |                  |                     |
  Support--+<--- L/4 -------->|<----- L/4 -------->+--Support
           |                  |                     |
        Rope              Coax (via              Rope
                          balun ideally)

  Total length L = 143 / f(MHz) metres

  Current distribution:
  ------/\-----------/    \-----------/\------
      |  \        /      \        /  |
      |   \      /  Max   \      /   |
      |    \    /  current  \    /    |
      |     \  /   at centre \  /    |
  Zero|      \/               \/     |Zero
  current                          current
  at ends                          at ends

  Feed point impedance: ~73 ohms (free space)
Half-wave dipole showing current distribution and feed point

Half-Wave Dipole Length Formula

$$L_{\text{dipole}} = \frac{143}{f_{\text{MHz}}} \text{ metres}$$

The factor 143 (rather than 150, which would be exactly half a wavelength in free space) accounts for the "end effect" -- the antenna is slightly shorter than a free-space half wavelength due to the capacitance at the wire ends.

Worked Example: Dipole for 28.150 MHz

Problem: What is the length of a half-wavelength dipole antenna for 28.150 MHz?

$$L = \frac{143}{28.150} = 5.08 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: Approximately 5.08 metres. (B-006-012-001)

Worked Example: Dipole for 3.75 MHz

Problem: If you were to cut a half-wave dipole for 3.75 MHz, what would be its approximate length?

$$L = \frac{143}{3.75} = 38.13 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: Approximately 38.13 metres. (B-006-012-009)

Feed Point Impedance

The impedance at the feed point of a half-wave dipole in free space is approximately 73 ohms. This is a good natural match to 50-ohm or 75-ohm coaxial cable -- close enough that the SWR stays low without additional matching.

Radiation Pattern

The three-dimensional radiation pattern of a half-wave dipole in free space is a torus (donut shape) around the antenna. Maximum radiation is broadside (perpendicular to the wire); minimum (nulls) are off the ends. A horizontal half-wave dipole with its ends pointing North/South (ignoring ground effects) radiates mostly to the East and West -- broadside to the wire.

  HALF-WAVE DIPOLE RADIATION PATTERN (Top View)

                    ^ Maximum radiation
                   / \
                  /   \
                 /     \
                /       \
  Null <-----------=====-----------> Null
    (off end)    \  DIPOLE  /     (off end)
                  \       /
                   \     /
                    \   /
                     \ /
                      v Maximum radiation

  3D: Rotate this pattern around the dipole axis
      to get the "donut" (torus) shape.
Top-down view of half-wave dipole radiation pattern

Random Wire Antenna

A disadvantage of a random wire antenna is that you may experience RF feedback in your station (RF in the shack). Because the feedpoint impedance is unpredictable, current can flow on the outside of the coax shield or on equipment chassis.

End-Fed Half-Wave (EFHW)

A major advantage of an end-fed half-wave antenna (EFHW) is that it is capable of multi-band operation. The EFHW is resonant on all harmonic frequencies (e.g., a 40m EFHW also works on 20m, 15m, and 10m).

Trapped Antennas

A disadvantage of using an antenna equipped with traps is that it may radiate harmonics more readily. The traps can allow harmonic energy to pass at certain frequencies. However, an advantage of using a trap antenna is that it may be used for multi-band operation.

The half-wave dipole feed impedance of 73 ohms and its gain of 2.1 dBi are two numbers worth memorizing. They come up repeatedly in exam questions and serve as the baseline for comparing other antennas.
A horizontal dipole's ends point North/South. In what direction does it radiate most strongly? East and West -- broadside to the wire.
Practice Questions: B-006-012 -- Dipole Antennas

B-006-012-001: If you made a half-wavelength dipole antenna for 28.150 MHz, approximately how long would it be?

  • A) 2.53 metres
  • B) 5.08 metres
  • C) 5.33 metres
  • D) 10.66 metres

B-006-012-002: What is one disadvantage of a random wire antenna?

  • A) It must be installed in a straight line, without bends
  • B) You may experience RF feedback in your station
  • C) It usually produces vertically polarized radiation
  • D) It must be longer than 1 wavelength

B-006-012-003: What is the three-dimensional radiation pattern of a half-wavelength dipole in free space?

  • A) Major lobes at 45-degree angles to the antenna
  • B) A torus (donut shape) around the antenna
  • C) A major lobe off each end of the antenna
  • D) Spherical (equal radiation in all directions)

B-006-012-004: What is the impedance at the feed point of a half-wave dipole in free space?

  • A) 300 ohms
  • B) 450 ohms
  • C) 73 ohms
  • D) 52 ohms

B-006-012-005: Ignoring ground effects, what is the radiation pattern of a horizontal half-wave dipole installed with the ends pointing North/South?

  • A) Radiates mostly to the South
  • B) Radiates equally in all directions
  • C) Radiates mostly to the East and West
  • D) Radiates mostly to the South and North

B-006-012-006: What is a major advantage of an end-fed half-wave antenna (EFHW)?

  • A) High resistance to local noise pickup
  • B) Develops minimal common-mode current
  • C) Capable of multi-band operation
  • D) Matching network not needed to feed with coaxial cable

B-006-012-007: What is a disadvantage of using an antenna equipped with traps?

  • A) It picks up more noise than a simple dipole
  • B) It can only be used for one band
  • C) It may radiate harmonics more readily
  • D) It is too sharply directional at lower frequencies

B-006-012-008: What is an advantage of using a trap antenna?

  • A) It may be used for multi-band operation
  • B) It has high directivity at the higher frequencies
  • C) It has high gain
  • D) It minimizes harmonic radiation

B-006-012-009: If you were to cut a half-wave dipole for 3.75 MHz, what would be its approximate length?

  • A) 62.40 metres
  • B) 80.00 metres
  • C) 38.13 metres
  • D) 40.00 metres

6.13 Loop Antennas B-006-013

Loop antennas -- including the quad and delta loop -- offer an alternative to Yagi designs with some distinct advantages: slightly more gain per element, a lower noise floor, and the flexibility to switch between horizontal and vertical polarization simply by moving the feed point. The trade-off is greater wind loading and mechanical complexity.
  QUAD ANTENNA                          DELTA LOOP ANTENNA
  (Square Loop)                         (Triangular Loop)

       +-------------------+                      /\
       |                   |                     /  \
       |                   |                    /    \
       |                   |                   /      \
       |     ~L/4          |                  /   ~L/3  \
       |    per side       |                 /          \
       |                   |                /            \
       |                   |               /              \
       +---------+---------+              /________________\
                 |                               |
            Feed point                      Feed point
            (bottom centre                  (bottom centre
             = horizontal                    = horizontal
             polarization)                   polarization)

  Total wire = 1 wavelength              Total wire = 1 wavelength

  QUAD WITH PARASITIC ELEMENT -- Side View

   Driven          Reflector
   element          (~5% larger)
    +--+             +--+
    |  |             |  |
    |  |             |  |
    |  |             |  |
    +--+             +--+
     |                |
     +-- 0.15-0.2L --+
         spacing

  Direction of maximum radiation: --->
  (from reflector toward driven element)
Quad and delta loop antennas

A quad antenna consists of two or more parallel four-sided wire loops, each approximately one wavelength long. It typically has a driven element and one or more parasitic elements (reflector, directors). The driven element of a quad antenna has an approximate overall length of one wavelength.

A delta loop antenna with parasitic elements is an antenna consisting of multiple elements, each a triangular loop whose total length is approximately one wavelength. The approximate overall length of a delta loop antenna is also one wavelength.

Loop Antenna Length Calculations

The driven element of a loop antenna (quad or delta) is one full wavelength. The formula uses 306 (rather than 300) to account for velocity effects in the wire:

$$L_{\text{loop}} = \frac{306}{f_{\text{MHz}}} \text{ metres}$$
Worked Example: Quad Driven Element for 21.4 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of the driven element of a quad antenna designed for 21.4 MHz?

$$L = \frac{306}{21.4} = 14.30 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 14.30 metres. (B-006-013-003)

Worked Example: Quad Driven Element for 14.3 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of the driven element of a quad antenna designed for 14.3 MHz?

$$L = \frac{306}{14.3} = 21.40 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 21.40 metres. (B-006-013-004)

Worked Example: Delta Loop for 28.7 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of a delta loop antenna designed for 28.7 MHz?

$$L = \frac{306}{28.7} = 10.66 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 10.66 metres. (B-006-013-005)

Worked Example: Horizontal Loop for 7.15 MHz

Problem: What is the approximate length of the wire for a horizontal loop tuned to 7.15 MHz?

$$L = \frac{306}{7.15} = 42.80 \text{ metres}$$

Answer: 42.80 metres. (B-006-013-009)

Feed Point and Polarization

The feed point location on a loop antenna determines its polarization. For horizontal polarization with an HF delta loop (bottom element parallel to ground), locate the feed point in the centre of the bottom element. Moving the feed point of a quad antenna from a side parallel to the ground to a side perpendicular to the ground will change the antenna polarization from horizontal to vertical.

  QUAD LOOP: Feed Point Determines Polarization

  HORIZONTAL POLARIZATION:          VERTICAL POLARIZATION:

       +-------------------+              +-------------------+
       |                   |              |                   |
       |                   |              +-- Feed            |
       |                   |              |   point           |
       |                   |              |   (side)          |
       |                   |              |                   |
       +---------+---------+              +-------------------+
                 |
            Feed point
            (bottom centre)
Feed position determines whether the quad produces horizontal or vertical polarization

Quad vs. Yagi

A major disadvantage of a quad antenna compared to a Yagi with the same number of elements and boom length is that the quad is more susceptible to weather damage. The large loop elements catch wind and collect ice more readily than straight Yagi elements.
What is the total wire length of a quad or delta loop driven element? One full wavelength, calculated as 306 / f(MHz) metres.
Practice Questions: B-006-013 -- Loop Antennas

B-006-013-001: What is a quad antenna?

  • A) Two or more parallel four-sided wire loops, each approximately one wavelength long
  • B) A centre-fed half-wavelength long wire
  • C) A quarter-wavelength vertical conductor fed at the bottom
  • D) Four straight, parallel elements in line with each other, each approximately a half-wavelength long

B-006-013-002: What is a delta loop antenna with parasitic elements?

  • A) An antenna made from several triangular coils of wire on an insulating form
  • B) An antenna consisting of multiple elements, each a triangular loop whose total length is approximately one wavelength
  • C) An antenna made of a large multi-turn triangular loop
  • D) An antenna system made of three vertical antennas, arranged in a triangular shape

B-006-013-003: What is the approximate length of the driven element of a quad antenna designed for 21.4 MHz?

  • A) 7.01 metres
  • B) 10.93 metres
  • C) 3.57 metres
  • D) 14.30 metres

B-006-013-004: What is the approximate length of the driven element of a quad antenna designed for 14.3 MHz?

  • A) 5.35 metres
  • B) 21.40 metres
  • C) 10.49 metres
  • D) 16.36 metres

B-006-013-005: What is the approximate length of a delta loop antenna designed for 28.7 MHz?

  • A) 3.55 metres
  • B) 8.15 metres
  • C) 4.98 metres
  • D) 10.66 metres

B-006-013-006: What is a major disadvantage of a quad antenna, as compared to a Yagi antenna with the same number of elements and boom length?

  • A) Requires matching the transmission line
  • B) More susceptible to weather damage
  • C) Requires a more heavy-duty mast or tower
  • D) Lower gain

B-006-013-007: You are constructing an HF delta loop antenna. It is oriented with the bottom element parallel to the ground. Where should you locate the feed point for horizontal polarization?

  • A) In the centre of the bottom element
  • B) In the centre of a side element
  • C) At a junction of the bottom element and a side element
  • D) On a side element, one quarter wavelength from the top

B-006-013-008: Moving the feed point of a quad antenna from a side parallel to the ground to a side perpendicular to the ground will have what effect?

  • A) It will change the antenna polarization from vertical to horizontal
  • B) It will significantly decrease the antenna feed point impedance
  • C) It will significantly increase the antenna feed point impedance
  • D) It will change the antenna polarization from horizontal to vertical

B-006-013-009: What is the approximate length of the wire for a horizontal loop tuned to 7.15 MHz?

  • A) 20.00 metres
  • B) 42.80 metres
  • C) 41.96 metres
  • D) 10.49 metres

B-006-013-010: The quad antenna consists of two or more square loops of wire. The driven element has an approximate overall length of:

  • A) one half wavelength
  • B) one wavelength
  • C) three quarters of a wavelength
  • D) two wavelengths

B-006-013-011: What is the approximate overall length of a delta loop antenna?

  • A) One half of a wavelength
  • B) One wavelength
  • C) One quarter of a wavelength
  • D) Two wavelengths

Quick Reference Summary

Key Formulas

WhatFormulaExample
Wavelength \(\lambda = \frac{300}{f_{\text{MHz}}}\) 25 MHz: 300/25 = 12 m
Half-wave dipole \(L = \frac{143}{f_{\text{MHz}}}\) metres 28.15 MHz: 143/28.15 = 5.08 m
Quarter-wave vertical \(L = \frac{71.3}{f_{\text{MHz}}}\) metres 21.125 MHz: 71.3/21.125 = 3.37 m
Full-wave loop (quad/delta) \(L = \frac{306}{f_{\text{MHz}}}\) metres 14.3 MHz: 306/14.3 = 21.40 m
Yagi driven element \(L \approx \frac{143}{f_{\text{MHz}}}\) metres 14.0 MHz: 143/14.0 = 10.21 m
Speed of radio waves 300,000 km/s = speed of light --

Connector Quick Reference

ConnectorUseRemember
PL-259/SO-239HF transceiversMost common HF connector
SMAHandheld radiosSmall = handheld
BNCTest equipment, low-powerBayonet = quick bench use
N-typeOutdoor/towerMoisture resistant

Transmission Line Quick Reference

TypeZ0LossBalanced?Key Fact
RG-5850 ohmsHighNoThin coax, short runs only
RG-21350 ohmsModerateNoStandard station coax
Twin-lead300 ohmsLowYesFlat ribbon, TV use
Window line300-450 ohmsVery lowYesNeeds balun to coax
Open-wire450-600 ohmsLowestYesCan run at high SWR

Antenna Comparison

AntennaGain (dBi)PatternPolarizationFeed Z
Isotropic0SphereN/A (theoretical)N/A
Half-wave dipole2.1Torus (donut)Depends on mounting73 ohms
Quarter-wave vertical~2-3Omnidirectional (horiz.)Vertical36-50 ohms
5/8-wave vertical~3-4Omnidirectional, lower angleVerticalNeeds matching
3-element Yagi~7-8DirectionalElement orientation~25 ohms
Quad loop~7-8DirectionalFeed point position~100 ohms

Critical Numbers to Remember

Polarization Rules