Actually, I was referring to no overlap. I have installed my share of a99/imax antennas using 2 foot long fiberglass rods as a separator in the last few years (their are previous posts on this forum where I talk about this). This put the antenna a few inches directly above the mast, and this is specifically what I was thinking about when I made that statement. Mounting these antennas in a way that they overlap the mast is simply creating a capacitor between the mounting bracket and mast, which, to me, is not the same as isolating the antenna from the mast. Using something like a fiberglass rod to elevate the mounting bracket above the mast would be far better at minimizing said capacitance, and thus better at "isolating" said antenna from the mast (even if its not complete isolation electrically it is very close). Am I wrong?
DB, no I don't think you are wrong. My thinking is based on the attached models and overlay.
I do see a difference but as usual...I don't see much difference among the four models noted as an A99 with 4 horizontal radials.
1. with no mast at all,
2. a mast directly below the antenna is isolated by 4" inches from the antenna, 3. a mast offset from the antenna and set 2" inches away,
4. and another set 12" away beside the mounting bracket and between two radials, with a 0.50" inch head-room clearance below the radials.
I also included two images of the tabular currents magnitudes per segment to compare for the models with a mast.
EDIT: After Bob gave me a heads-up that my models did not show CMC, I went back and checked and I get similar results to what Henry posted. Right now I can't explain why my old EFHW with 4 72" or 108" radials showed no obvious CMC's, but it could be due to the radials.
Sorry Henry and DB, I should have looked before I leaped.
Thanks, Bob.
Attachments
Last edited: