#Ground

Osna.FMosnafm
2025-12-02

The German stock market opened Tuesday with a modest gain, fueled by a significant boost for Bayer shares following a critical development in the company's prot... news.osna.fm/?p=25631 |

Pekka Nikruspni@pixelfed.de
2025-11-23
A close-up view of a weathered pavement with two painted white squares among brown tiles, surrounded by scattered dry leaves and grass.
2025-11-22

Testing ground: Startups use Hokkaido ballpark complex to try out products

Startups Companies hoping for hits head to home of Nippon-Ham Fighters baseball club Startups from around the globe are testing their technologies and services at an entertainment complex that is centere…
#Japan #JP #Hokkaido #Ballpark #complex #Ground #HokkaidoNews #news #Products #startups #testing #try #use #北海道
alojapan.com/1417104/testing-g

2025-11-22

alojapan.com/1417104/testing-g Testing ground: Startups use Hokkaido ballpark complex to try out products #Ballpark #complex #Ground #Hokkaido #HokkaidoNews #news #Products #startups #testing #try #use #北海道 Startups Companies hoping for hits head to home of Nippon-Ham Fighters baseball club Startups from around the globe are testing their technologies and services at an entertainment complex that is centered on the home field of the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters baseball cl

Testing ground: Startups use Hokkaido ballpark complex to try out products
2025-11-21

POTA PERformer radials – can we make a compromise?

There has only been one light snowfall in southern Ontario so far this season – just a few centimeters that melted away within a couple of days. In anticipation of upcoming heavier snowfalls and a semi-permanent white blanket that will last until spring, I bravely shrugged off the chilly outside air and set up my Ham Radio Outside the Box version of the POTA PERformer antenna out in the backyard to experiment with radial lengths.

The cunningly repaired broken shortened whip with a capacitive top hat, to compensate for its inductive reactance on the 20m band, sat atop my custom spike mount that, despite falling temperatures, could still be pushed into the ground about 25cm (10 inches). Two radials were attached each of which sloped down to a fiberglass stake about a foot (30cm) above ground. The radials are approximately 5m (17ft) long for the 20m band with links to shorten the wires for the 17m and 15m bands.

Now, to find a shortcut

The objective for the day’s tests was to investigate whether compromises could be made in the radial lengths. Why? Later in the winter, when the snow lies deep and crisp and even, it can become a real chore to wade through accumulations of the infernal white stuff to adjust the radial lengths for band changes. I have adopted 2mm banana plugs for the links – a great idea in the summer, but maybe I neglected to consider what will happen when even a few snow flakes freeze on those tiny connectors in the winter!

So, how to minimize pedestrian excursions through the challenges of winter operating conditions to accommodate band changes? The POTA PERformer is an efficient antenna but it was designed in California where the climate is just a little milder than in Ontario. Should I go back to using a random wire antenna – like the Rybakov – until spring comes around again?

I could perhaps use “fan radials” i.e. separate radials for each band. That would probably work but setting them up might still involve wading through deep snow. In the past I have used ground radials laid on the snow – a multiband arrangement that requires no adjustment for band changes, but is less efficient.

Back to the backyard tests; what did I find out?

  • First, my approximately 16.5ft (~5m) raised radial wires provided an acceptable SWR (less than 2:1) on 20m and 17m (with the whip length shortened for 17m).
  • Second, the same wires – with the links adjusted for 15m and the whip shortened again – gave an acceptable SWR on 15m, 12m and 10m.

So, is this a result? Maybe not. There is a potential for lost efficiency when the radiating element is shorter than the counterpoise. Let me explain.

Let’s assume we are using a field portable version of the POTA PERformer in which the feedpoint remains quite close to the ground – maybe 1 to 1.5 meters. The two radial wires slope away from the feedpoint to an end point even lower to the ground. Now, if we examine the current distribution on a halfwave dipole, we can see that the maximum current, and therefore the point at which maximum RF is radiated, is located in the center of the dipole.

We would like the high current point to lie within the radiating element, not the counterpoise. For the purposes of this discussion we are going to refer to the two radial wires as “the counterpoise”.

Going back to my backyard tests, I found that:

  • a 20m counterpoise “worked” on the 17m band.
  • a 15m counterpoise also “worked” on the 12m and 10m bands.

In each of these cases the radiating element was shorter than the counterpoise.

Referring to the accompanying diagrams we can see that the high current point, in each case, lies within the counterpoise.

Does this finding matter?

Changing the radiating element versus counterpoise balance creates an antenna that looks very much like an Off Center Fed Dipole (OCFD).

If an OCFD is mounted high enough above ground it doesn’t matter at all although two things need to be considered here:

  1. Changing the radiating element versus counterpoise lengths changes the impedance at the feedpoint.
  2. The overall length of the dipole might change unexpectedly. This can be seen with Greg KJ6ER’s Challenger antenna which is a vertical OCFD halfwave dipole that is shortened by laying part of the counterpoise wire on the ground.

A relatively small change in the ratio between the radiating element versus counterpoise lengths changes the feedpoint impedance, but this can be compensated by adjusting the whip length to still obtain a usable SWR.

However, we cannot compensate for the proximity to ground of the counterpoise in the POTA PERformer. If the current maximum occurs at the feedpoint (1 to 1.5 meters above ground) very little power is lost. But, if the current maximum occurs below the feedpoint we are going to keep the earthworms warm in winter.

Not the best plan

So we can conclude that using a 20m counterpoise on 17m risks losing some of our RF energy to the ground. The same applies for using a 15m counterpoise on 12m and 10m. The following diagram summarizes this.

The way forward

“Fan radials” may still be a solution but they require some careful experimentation. There is interaction between the wires for each band due to mutual capacitance. This is compounded when multiple bands are involved. To make matters worse, when used out in the Big Blue Sky Shack where the wind doth blow through the wires and changes the interaction, who knows what wild swings in SWR may occur? The radio I have dubbed my “very clever poodle” (QMX: see last post) will not take kindly to that.

A final thought

I have watched several videos in which a very short whip is mounted on a picnic table and used with a single long counterpoise wire draped down to and across the ground. Sometimes the “Magic (Tune) Button” assists in finding an SWR that keeps the radio smiling. Contacts get made, so what’s the problem? I hope the above discussion answers that question.

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#amateurRadio2 #antennas #counterpoise #ground #outdoorOps #pota #qmx

Michael CaffariBigillu@mas.to
2025-11-16

Bless the #sea , bless the #sky , bless the #sun , bless the #ground
In the glow 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
#nature
#sunday
#life
#bliss

Bless the #sea , bless the #sky , bless the #sun , bless the #ground 
In the glow 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 
#nature 
#sunday
#life
#bliss
Osna.FMosnafm
2025-11-11

The Alternative for Germany (AfD) continues to hold a commanding lead in voter preference, according to a recent poll conducted by the market research institute... news.osna.fm/?p=22942 |

2025-11-09

UPS, FedEx ground MD-11 cargo planes after deadly Kentucky crash

It said around 9% of UPS’ fleet are MD-11s. FedEx said it, too, had grounded its 28 MD-11s…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #after #cargo #carriers #crash #deadly #FedEx #fleets #freight #ground #grounded #have #involved #Kentucky #md11 #NewZealand #NZ #planes #states #their #them #this #united #UPS #week
newsbeep.com/239436/

2025-11-09

I am a and I'm using this called LanguageTool Editor. I have the phrase -floor and it highlighted it blue. And it said this - This is a british english. Do you mean -floor?

Then it asks if you wish to switch to .

I'm not saying it's bad. I just find it funny.

I've used both ground floor and first floor. I'm from the of garbage land. I say whatever phrases I want - Rather it's from Japan, England, spain or other place.

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.07
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst