GARTHWILSON wrote:
When I worked in applications engineering at the VHF/UHF power transistor manufacturer, we sometimes made 4:1 or 9:1 transformers with coax. Here's how a 4:1 is connected:
Attachment:
4to1X4mr.gif
Again note that although one conductor is grounded at one end, it's the signal at the other end.
It was commonplace aboard ship for fixed length whip antennae (usually 35 feet) to be attached to radio transmitters with very wide frequency ranges, usually from 50 meters to 10 meters. As best energy transfer occurs between transmitter and a whip antenna when the whip is a quarter-wavelength, means had to be provided to achieve such a condition. The fact that the whip was bolted to a grounded steel ship effectively made the antenna system look a lot like a dipole, although it didn't operate in that fashion
The solution took the form of a sophisticated antenna adapter made by Collins which essentially did what you were doing with your coax "transformers." The adapter wound and unwound a silver plated strip onto a drum (an adjustable inductor) in such a way that the whip appeared to be "longer" or "shorter" according to the frequency on which the transmitter was operating. It was easy to see when a good match was achieved during CW transmission, as the final plate current would sharply dip and the field strength meter we used to assess transmitter performance would sharply peak up.
The Collins box also included an adjustable capacitor, which was used to aid in matching the 50 ohm characteristic impedance of the transmitter output and the coax cable as closely as possible. An impedance mismatch would also cause a rise in final plate current, but also bring on significant harmonic distortion, which a trained operator could readily hear in the received signal. Therefore, coordinated use of drum and capacitor was required to correctly load the transmitter.
Both voice and data were transmitted with SSB suppressed carrier, sometimes with voice on the lower sideband and encrypted data on the upper (I no longer recall the reason, but the upper sideband was considered better for data flow). A 2KW transmitter could operate around the world with this setup, even during daylight hours.