Sunday, July 2, 2023

Convenience or Compromise antenna for portable HF?!

 It depends on what one considers as good ops!. When speed matters like in regional emergency comms, NVIS strategy is most beneficial. NVIS antennas for any bands are very low to ground often no higher than quarter wavelength. Dipoles or EFHW hung just few feet above ground get this mode going in shortest possible time.

When one is looking for mid to long range distance comms i.e 500Km + and moves beyond those weak signal modes like FT8, JT65 etc., there comes the need of height, optimized antennas or directivity. This article may be of interest to such Ham Radio enthusiasts who are looking into operating beyond regional comms for non Weak Signal modes and do great. This is based on my experiences of last few years on the field portable ops and subsequent 4NEC2 model based verifications.

First thing first - When we look for portable ops such as POTA and field days, one will come across great amount of content on internet webpages and youtube. Most majority suggest use of End Fed Random wire or Halfwave antennas and some use small loaded verticals. But, look, all were looking at activating the park with 10 contacts or having some outdoor fun during the day. Most of the antennas are low to ground or vertical. Especially EFHW is popular because of convenience of multiband operation. Carefully observing the signal reach patterns of their reports, it is relatively rare that they work 6000 Kilo meter+ distances, on consistent basis. One will get to know US operators working other states around or bordering countries. Like wise in EU, they work each other countries and mostly they are withing  couple of thousand KMs. But in VU where is the active ham population to reach? othenr than during regional NET checkin times on 40m? So, mostly one resorts to FT8 or other similar weak signal mode to increase QSO rate (if that is the objective)

I mostly participate in CW or SSB Contests and objective is optimizing DX QSO rates and score with less weight and hassles. I have worked on hill tops, River estuaries, beach areas etc over last few years and evolved my learning with practically building various antennas such as Dipoles, EFHW, Inverted Vee, Verticals (mono band and multi band fan type), VDA (both mono and multi band), Hexbeam and spiderbeam yagis. I would like to keep VDA and Yagis aside this time and focus on portable popular EFHW and verticals.

Following is the Elevation (Blue) and Azimuth pattern for 40m EFHW in inverted Vee configuration 10meter (quarter wavelength) above average ground. Most of the radiation is straight up and at 10deg angle from ground level, it is around -7dB. 


Second plot is for same 40m EFHW at 20m (half wavelength above ground). Now, we can see the elevation pattern is shaping up with -0.13dB gain at 10deg angle. These plots will be same for standard inverted Vee centerfed dipole at fundamental resonant frequency.

But this pattern distorts for higher resonances such as 20m, 15m and 10m bands with additional azimuth wing patterns and lowering elevation angles. Based on the situation they may be taken as advantage or can be disadvantageous.

Advantages of EFHW are many--
a) Requires feedpoint at lower height i.e less coax
b) no more heavy duty pole or support required at center point
c) resonates at multiple harmonic frequencies

If EFHW is similar to dipole, why not just use it all the time?
What the modeling misses is actual transformation loss and RFI. EFHW requires carefully built (often shown as easy to build) 49:1 or 64:1 transformer at feedpoint. And in mono band version of  EFHW, one can construct simple feedline stub to gain the advantage (example JPole) of much lower loss. When operating portable, many compromises made in the name of QRP starting with lossy Coax, fact of RFI pickup is not noticed etc. These can be excuses only for highly tactical and worst case situation, but attentive ham should be careful more than QRO ops as inefficiencies adds up. For example: Let us consider 10W output from Transceiver connected to EFHW with RG58 of 10m length. Let us assume with 1.2:1 SWR antenna. This delivers approximately 9Watts to feed point. A transformer loss of 20% on this 9Watts brings down another 1.8Watts i.e power delivered to antenna will now be 7.2Watts. So, even before one says antenna is efficient or no, we have 28% reduced power already delivered due to convenience we wanted. OK, now most of the time I have been told these losses are negligible and no one will differentiate on the other side etc. I agree to some extent, but on the edge condition, these negligence matter a lot and which could be fixed easily.

Adding a coax such as RG213 or LMR 400 and feeding antenna directly such as dipole ( or vertical) without transformer is next step up bringing the losses to less than 10% (efficiency goal in my case). I made first SSB, CW DX QSOs with simple fan inverted Vee only. High apex works always! Verticals are though directly fed, will pose roadblocks in to efficiency journey if not given attention to its ground system. 

I have both QRP and QRO dual core EFHW transformers in my portable kit as fallback. But do I prefer them over dipole?. No. because there is one more reason I have not mentioned earlier with importance, i.e RFI in the Coax line leading up to shack. Unbalance nature of the random wire and EFHW, forces RF on outer shield of coax in both transmit and receive. While transmit RFI is obviously experienced in causing interference to other nearby transceivers, interconnect wires, and if QRO, tingling sensation while speaking to handmic/keying and distorted audio etc. Receive issue is even worst as it picks up local electrical noises and raises the noise floor. To minise RFI we can add counterpoise wires or choke on the line after few meters from transformer etc. But the point is convenience comes at price.

So what other options?. Ofcourse, there is dipole when 1/2 wave height could be established or verticals good radial system. Following are two plots, one on the left is ideal vertical(needs atleast 16 radials or more) on average ground and on the right side with single tuned elevated radial. While two or more elevated radials provide balanced omni pattern, single radial provides some directivity in the direction of the radial. This type of system was practically tested at one of our early field experiments for 80m band which can be found at Blog post link





Here is overlap of two elevation patterns. My experiences showed that when no other antennas are close proximity, having elevated tuned verticals are advantages as it becomes easy for field portable to achieve better efficiency than few ground level radials.

Also, if we are at coast verticals even work much better at 5 to 15 degree elevation angles for great DX. But dot not get overwelmed with EFHW stung vertically to think it will perform same for all the harmonic bands. Just like EFHW in inverted Vee or horizontal position, distorting patterns on harmonic frequencies, vertical also forms higher angle signals which will not be useful in long range.

So while we chose the antenna at hand as better than none, when there is choice, make optimal use of them for the situation, location and purpose we intend to. Afterall, Ham radio is a learning and advancement hobby, just try these and prove!

Have fun
Kiran VU2XE
















Sunday, June 4, 2023

W6PQL Amplifier's intermittent RX issue troubleshooting and sequencer adjustment

 W6PQL amplifier is great modular amplifier design. Since I had homebrew assembled in 2015/16, it has proven very solid and reliable. I have some issues with Directional coupler and detection of signals to represent reverse power accurately as per Jim's design. However, other than this aspect, i have used the amp in many contests and activations. Last year(2022) during CQWW CW contest, I realized that sequencer is slightly slow in switching back to RX from TX mode. Some of the stations I did not copy either first character or sometimes missing dit or dashes of the first character. This was not serious issue, but anyways, once you know what adjustments to do internally, you tend to tweak it towards perfection. I tweaked the timing so that its faster switching in sequence. 

During the CQWPX SSB contest i did not realize any issues. And after all SSB signals are delay start by human nature of speaking into mic. Also, problem of hot switching might have started during the WPX SSB itself , but did not come to surface. During WPX CW, My entry was bit delayed due to exhausting MQTH work till previous day late night and tr avel related fatigue.  VU2VTI was the early starter at VU2REC club station for the contest. When I started on the bands, at first it seemed all ok. But, suddenly started feeling the RX is weak sometimes and delayed to full signals. I thought it was due to some ionospheric disturbance. But when it continued for some hours, i sensed it unusual. Asked VU2VTI to be on my system and run the contest for few minutes. He confirmed that it is unusual and something might be wrong with my Amp or Radio. I then disconnected amp from the path and observed no issues with RX drop. This confirmed me that Relays inside the Amplifier might be damaged. No time to fix and no spare relays on hand. I packed my amp to carry back and continued the contest with TS590 barefoot.

Back at home, after opening the amplifier lids, first thing visually checking the three LEDs in sequence i.e. Hold off ALC line, Trigger Relay line, Release ALC line. Initially it was almost instant, I adjusted PCB variable pot to have some visible lag between the events. There was no RF input given to the amplifier, all testing was done using a SPST switch to PTT in RCA plug. This allowed me to rapidly check the working. Next came checking the Input and Output  Relays. While input relays typically take less than 10Watts or less in the path (my drive power), output relays handle upwards of 350W or more.

I had a hunch that output relays might be the issue due this factor. While switching PTT line, keeping my fingers on the relay, I sensed no movement in the output relay. Thanks to modular design of the amp,  i could desolder the output relay PCB and test it separately. Found that relay coil was showing higher resistance and was not energizing. This is Omron G2RL-1E relay and fortunately, i had few of them in my spares. I did replace the relay and test OK.

This incident has taught me something very important about sequencer lines and never to be too greedy beyond the design specs. By properly adjusting PTT delay for Amp (i.e RF hold back after PTT switching), we can safely control the TRX path for signals. Typically 100ms is what W6PQL suggests (Hold ALC line + 50ms delay+ trigger relays+50ms delay + release ALC line). 

Now will have to wait for next contest or event for my setup testing in real situation.

Hope this helps someone in similar situation.

VU2XE


Convenience or Compromise antenna for portable HF?!

 It depends on what one considers as good ops!. When speed matters like in regional emergency comms, NVIS strategy is most beneficial. NVIS ...