DB, my model of the A/P with no blue line requires a mast 240" inches long to in order to show a good match of 45.46 - J 0.008199 ohms at resonance and it could be even better. So, you are right about the mast needing to be made longer in the absence of the blue line in order to see a good match.
Is this 240" inches antenna mast length inside and below the radials even close to what you get with your model?
My mast length is 220". With that mast length I am able to take the stock dimensions and tune the AP to resonance. When I remove the "blue wire", I don't need to change the mast length at all, it stays at 220". It seems resonance is the key. On your model, assuming minor differences between out models, you may need to adjust this mast length to compensate.
I didn't adjust this model to show an SWR match to begin with, I used the stock dimensions and a mast length that showed optimal resonance. SWR was something like 1.3 to begin with and it went down after I removed the "blue wire". The only other change I made was to correct for AGT. I don't remember what it was pre-correction, but it wasn't anything like that 1.6 that you had.
Alternately, you can tune the antenna without the "blue wire" in the model, and after it is tuned you can add it in. That would be doing essentially what I am doing only in the opposite direction.
I don't believe we can remove this blue line wire from the model and just extended the antenna mast, and still expect any good results. I would hope you might shed some light of any error I made. This is why I keep asking if we are doing this model right using this trick...or should I say procedure for tuning a model.
Again, when I removed the wire, I didn't have to extend the mast.
The link to patent 3587109 below discusses this area in the abstract at column #4 lines 17-29, and is illustrated in Fig 5 on sheet 2 of 2. Both Fig 5 & 6 suggest and open loop idea, but in that case the feed point needs to be on wire #18 per the patent, the radial under the feed point on the real antenna.
According to the patent...
Astroplane Patent said:
A coaxial transmission means or cable 37 runs up the vertical boom to level A and terminates in a coaxial connector 39 secured to the clamp assembly. A first transmission feed lead 38 of cable 37, its braided cover, is electrically connected to clamping element 25 and the inner lead 40 is electrically connected to split brass ring 36 (hence to the third conductor 18 at level A). The third conductor 18 is insulated from the first and second conductors at level A at which the clamp assembly 24 lies by insulative segments 34. Four bolts and nuts 42 are provided adjacent end portion 30 to compress segments 34 of the insulative bushing against each other to cause the split ring to engage conductor 18 tightly and to provide a secure electrical connection therebetween and at level A.
One side of the feed point is on conductor 18 and the other is on clamping element 25, which is eclectically shorted to the mounting bracket. That means that the feed point is exactly in the connection between these two elements. Because we can't put the feed point right in this spot, and for our own reasons you chose one side and I chose the other. We are both equally correct and equally incorrect here.
Perhaps, if you want your feed point to be in the corner instead of just on one side or the other you would put two feed points on your model, one on each side right next to the corner. I, however, don't see the point. In my experience with modeling I know that this won't make that much of a difference.
I believe I have workable model that has a feed point on this wire #18 noted in the patent. I will see if it works when removing one of the small wires in the mounting bracket. also as noted in the patent as shown in Fig #5, in particular.
The patent also talks about the bottom area of the antenna being a closed loop with possible construction as an open loop. Again see column #4 lines 26-29 for alternative details. I'm not saying that I have the understanding of this issue, but these words seem pertinent and clear to me and the images helps too. They do call this area a loop. However, I would not swear to this base on anything I've read in nav2010 post on this subject...just to be clear I said it earlier.
Again, Nav's image did it for me, and I can only assume that his words somehow describe what he as saying. My words here are not meant to be critical.
The first thing to remember is their are parts of the patent that we have demonstrated to be incorrect. This has happened to enough parts of the patent that I don't inherently trust what the patent states unless I can confirm it independently.
Until he actually tries to help with what I asked for, rather than going into pointless questions that I already knew the answer to (and him actually getting part of his answers wrong...) Seriously, why couldn't he have just helped with what I was specifically asking about, which was his weird use of terminology, (which he intentionally avoided doing). As far as I am concerned what he is saying is irrelevant. Even when it comes to the so called "facts" he posts, especially when it comes to loops, he is wrong on one of the most basic aspects (among others) of how a loop functions. Anyway, enough about him.
DB, below is my model that follows the idea noted in Fig #5 in the patent. I used this model with the full 1/4 wave because I had fed it at the top of the radial under the A/P feed point
Take a close look at the diagram listed in the patent and the wire layout of your model, you will see where their should be an open circuit their is still an electrical short because of the second wire you used for the bracket in your model that you failed to remove. That second wire doesn't appear in the patent, so to simulate what you are trying to do with the patent you have to remove that second wire as well. In your model you really didn't do much to the antenna, you just made the path between your feed point and the mast a few inches longer which is very different electrically to what they show in the diagram in the patent.
Actually having this second wire to simulate the bracket is strange to me, I don't see two wires like this in the patent or on the actual antennas. I wonder if this is a big part of the differences we see between our antennas?
Also, that is not the "blue wire" I am referring to. Do not confuse the wires that make up the two sides of the bracket, and do not assume the "blue wire" I am referring to has anything to do with anything in the patent, it doesn't.
The DB