For some reason MFJ used an 'X' instead of 'J', no idea why. But the 'X' and 'J' are the same thing, reactance.
- 'Doc
Doc, MFJ did that because the "J" value is the reactance and the symbol for reactance is the letter "X". usually we see Xc for capacitive reactance and XL for inductive reactance. Since the MFJ meter does not show whether the reactance is C or L ( you have to determine that on your own by retuning the meter) they simply use the "X" to indicate the reactive component of the impedance.
Thanks W5LZ,
Yes, the metric system is a bit difficult at first. We in England changed to metric many years ago, and have to work in both systems when dealing with different countries. We also converted money from imperial to decimal £ S D Pound, shillings and pence. 12 pence in a shilling, 20 shillings in a pound.
Anyway back to Antennas (or do I mean Aerials)
My Antenna is 20.1 (66Ft) (1/2 wave) As we have discussed this is resonant at 2,913Mhz.
Can you give me the calculation again please, using Yards, Feet and inches is ok. To tell me how long the wire should be, to resonate.
I am assuming that once it is resonating at 7.030Mhz, I multiply j and R together to find the impedance. I'm hoping for somewhere around 4-5000Ohms.
Cheers, Camerart. Hope you got your coffee ok.
No you do NOT multiply those numbers. They are two separate components that make up the impedance. Ideally you want the X to be as near zero as you can get. Since you have approx. 66 feet of wire,which is near 1/2 wavelength on 40m, I think you need to check it out again with the analyzer. You may be seeing a resonant point down near 2.9 MHz due to a variety of factors besides just wire length. Check it out again and tune from about 6.0MHz up to 8 MHz or so and look for a sudden peak in the R value. This should occurs as the X value drops. Don;t worry if the X never gets to zero but it should be something quite low. In the single digits even. The 1/2 wave of wire should show many hundreds of ohms even at that height above ground. I can see my MFJ analyzer over-range (1500+) when looking into a 1/2 wave wire.