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GAMMA MATCHES

Ozaukee Radio club November 2013 A quick overview of the steps needed to adjust an antenna matching network usually seen on many older single band yagi antennas By Ken Boston W9GA. GAMMA MATCHES.

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GAMMA MATCHES

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  1. Ozaukee Radio club November 2013 • A quick overview of the steps needed to adjust an antenna matching network usually seen on many older single band yagi antennas • By Ken Boston W9GA GAMMA MATCHES

  2. This type of feed-line connection is commonly seen being used to allow a coaxial cable to be coupled to the driven element of a yagi beam antenna It is intended for use on a mono band yagi, (14 meg and up to VHF) and is a ‘single ended’ termination, as opposed to a balanced connection. It is also commonly seen being used to shunt feed HF vertical antennas. What is a gamma match ?

  3. Gamma match components on a 6 meter beam.

  4. Other feedline matches: Balanced coax Balanced feed; Tee match: split feed with 4:1 coax balun:

  5. My experience with a modified CushCraft A50-5 • This antenna as designed has 5 elements on a 12 food boom. The W5WVO mod consists of adding boom material and resetting the element configuration for a 17 foot boom, resulting in a +1.5 dB gain and a cleaner pattern. • Upon redesigning the antenna, I tried to set the matching components, and after a couple hours, decided there must be a better way than just ‘hunt and peck’ • Back to the trusty internet, but just became frustrated, with tips ranging from very vague, to a large technical tutorial on antenna feedpoint methods.

  6. 3 steps to tuning the match • Get the antenna clear of surrounding metal or ground effects. • Make sure you have a decent analyzer, and a half wavelength (or multiple) cable. • Make changes to 3 parameters on the driven element to set the match. Driven element length, distance to the shorting bar, and the amount of capacitance.

  7. Step 1: ‘Clear’ the antenna In order for the match to be correct when the antenna is raised into the air, you want little interaction from the nearby ground, and any other metal objects. (Near field interference) For this yagi, we ran poly rope between a tower and a tree, with a pulley tied in the middle, then raised the yagi with a second rope tied near the front of the yagi antenna, thru the pulley and off to the side, and pointed the yagi straight up. The reflector (back end) was set on a pair of wooden horses.

  8. Using the antenna analyzerStep 2 • 1. I used an MFJ 259B, good for the bands from 1.8 MHz up to 144 MHz • 2. Other analyzers are similar (earlier OZ club presentation) • 3. Display will show: frequency, R, X, SWR • 4. Connection to antenna will need to be made with a short run of coax, electrical length must be a multiple of half wave • 5 Connecting with short jumper results in your body being to close to the antenna, skewing the match numbers, use a length. • 6 Using a half wave (or multiple) will ‘repeat’ the impedance from the match at a distance. • 7 Connect a cable which is not terminated at far end, and add (or subtract by cutting if using cable with no connector on end) length until the ‘infinite’ R value is seen at the analyzer. Do this at the frequency that we are interested in matching.

  9. Adding coax length to get high Impedance

  10. Trim cable to length

  11. Analyzer showing high Z

  12. Step 3; adjusting the match, part 1 • Following the guidelines from the antenna manufacturers manual, set the driven element length to the needed length for the center frequency in the band desired, (if DE length is adjustable) • Connect the cable from the analyzer to the match and set the frequency of the analyzer to the desired center frequency. • For the purposes of this talk, some pictures were created using the 10 meter dipole I have brought out to our Field day the last couple years. (part of a 3 element CushCraft beam) • Since we are adjusting a conjugate match, we need to set both the real part and the imaginary part of the match; • Z =R +/- jX • ( I was told there would be no math)

  13. View of the match components, (from a 144 beam)

  14. Equivalent circuit for gamma match

  15. Step 3 matching part 2 • Using the analyzer, first try for a 50 ohm reading for the R value (real part of the impedance) by setting the shorting bar distance out from the boom. Sliding further out should increase the R, closer to boom should reduce the R.

  16. R=52 ohms, X still off (jX=47)

  17. Next, with the analyzer, adjust the distance of the matching tube from the boom, sliding in or out over the inner conductor mounted to the connector, until the X value is at or near zero. You are effectively varying the capacitance in a piston capacitor. (on the MFJ, there is no +J or -J, so you will have to play with this parameter to see if you are going to zero, or increasing to a higher value.) Step 3 matching part 3

  18. R=51 ohms, X=9 ohms,SWR=1.2

  19. Check match at frequency edges • If after setting shorting bar, and gamma tubing to a good match at the center frequency, check at the band edges, and if one band edge looks a little better, re-set driven element length • Match better at lower edge, shorten DE a little • Match better at upper edge, lengthen DE a little

  20. 4 bay EME array going together

  21. Questions? • Ask now, or please ask anytime. • Thanks for your undivided attention. (wake up Tom)

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