Hi all !
How about the coupling of the lambda for antenna ? Should I bee as I drawn above, with the upper "connector" of the transmission-line attached to the antenna such a distance from its ground where we have 50 Ohm.
I mean if I couple both connector of the transmissionline at the foot of the antenn, I really short-circuit at the foot of the antenna. If I go to the other extreme, I couple one connector to the foot of the antenna and one connector at its head, the I have the opposite in impedance also. Infinity.
Somewhere in between is 50 Ohms. Am I correct about this ??? Is this the way to couple a lambda/four antenna ? Or is it as Element7K drew, putting a lambda/4 long wire at the node of the LC-tank ?
I've attached a Smithchart that shows how one transforms 35 Ohm to 50Ohm.
1. Find 35 Ohm on the Smith-chart, by doing normalization with transmissionline impedance z=r+j*x=35/50=0.7+j*0.
2. The mission is then to add series L,seriesC,shunt L or shunt C, to arrive att the midpoint 1.0.
(In upper left I've put a grey dot.Going upwards from the dot along blue circles, means adding shunt L, downward along blue circle, means adding C in shunt. I've also colored these paths in green.
If one goes upwards along red circle => add L in series,
go downwards => add C in series.)
3. I've found my startpoint 0.7 and I am going upwards along a red circle (remember, goal is to reach 1.0 ). Taking 9 steps each worh 0.05 => z_L=j*0.45. We've added this and now got normalized impedance z=0.7+j0.45.
4. Go now downwards along blue sircle, constant admittance circle. But first read the admittance value where you stopped y=g+j*b=1-j*0.65
I decide to go downward along blue circle, taking 6.5 steps each step is worth 0.1=>y_C=j0.65. Result y=1.
5. Denormalize z_L =>Z_L=z_L*50
and also y_L => Y_L=y_L/50.
Kindest regards, StoppTidigare