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Ground Plane

 
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astills(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 17, 2006 4:27 pm    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

Hi all,
I've been having a little problem with ATC reading my transponder all the
time. I suspect a bit of shadowing.. I have the 2 1/2"-3" transponder
antenna mounted
upside down on a shelf on the rear corner of the baggage bay. I have a 6"
steel ground plane mounted to the antenna. What size ground plane have
others used
successfully and where is your antenna mounted. ATC reads me better out of
KGEU with a feed from Luke AFB while KDVT (where I'm hangered) gets their
feed
from Phoenix Sky Harbor airport. By far KDVT is worse than KGEU. I know
there is difference in the feed from the different radars but need to get
rid of most of the
shadowing if possible. Sure would make me more presentable to the guys at
KDVT. (One of the busiest GA ariports in the nation)
Have about 8 hrs on the plane now and the grin is still in place. Gets even
bigger the more I fly!

Al Stills
N625AZ


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grahamsingleton(at)btinte
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 17, 2006 4:52 pm    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

Al
the best place might be up on the roof, upside down. Nothing much to
shadow it up there? Your ground plane sounds OK but a halfwave dipole is
better, Bob Archer makes a heat one. Gives a flatter distribution pattern
Graham

AlStills wrote:

Quote:


Hi all,
I've been having a little problem with ATC reading my transponder all the
time. I suspect a bit of shadowing.. I have the 2 1/2"-3" transponder
antenna mounted
upside down on a shelf on the rear corner of the baggage bay. I have a 6"
steel ground plane mounted to the antenna. What size ground plane have
others used

Al Stills
N625AZ




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SPurpura(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 17, 2006 5:50 pm    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

TRY IT WITHOUT THE GROND PLANE,MY BOB ARCER HAS NONE. [quote][b]

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M.Grass(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 17, 2006 6:45 pm    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

Very bad advise!!!

The Bob Archer Antenna is a "dipole" antenna and is similar in design as your Com antenna if built like suggested in the Europa manual. The 2 1/2 inch antenna is a monopole antenna and needs a ground plane of either 51/2 inch diameter or at least 27 inch or greater. Everything between or smaller is bad.

I would be concerned about all metal within the close proximity of the antenna. I am thinking of fuel lines, flap actuator, hard point out of metal in the fuselage etc.. You should be fine if you keep any metal pieces (could be even a length of your AWG24 wire) of the size of 21/2 inches or greater at least 6 inches away. The ideal ground plane is any metal circular in shape with 5 1/2 inch diameter and the monopole antenna sticking through the hole and points downwards. You have to have a very low resistance between the outer part of your BNC connector and the ground plane.

Hope that helps.

Michael Grass
A266 Trigear
Detroit Michigan
[quote] ---


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jimpuglise(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 17, 2006 7:39 pm    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

Al-

I have mine installed but have not used it yet. I think you are going to be much better off with a vertical dipole in the Europa than a ground plane. The Archer antenna the others spoke about is a vertical dipole. Mine is fastened to a piece of balsa wood that is fitted to the contour of the fuselage on the port side as far aft as possible. It is just about opposite the inspection port in the root of the rudder. I'll let you know how it works in a year or so.

Jim Puglise - A-283

[quote]-------------- Original message --------------
From: "AlStills" <astills(at)cox.net>

[quote] --> Europa-List message posted by: "AlStills"

Hi all,
I've been having a little problem with ATC reading my transponder all the
time. I suspect a bit of shadowing.. I have the 2 1/2"-3" transponder
antenna mounted
upside down on a shelf on the rear corner of the baggage bay. I have a 6"
steel ground plane mounted to the antenna. What size ground plane have
others used
successfully and where is your antenna mounted. ATC reads me better out of
KGEU with a feed from Luke AFB while KDVT (where I'm hangered) gets their
feed
from Phoenix Sky Harbor airport. By far KDVT is worse than KGEU. I know
there is difference in the feed from the different radars but n eed to R>> [quote][b]


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jodel(at)nildram.co.uk
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 18, 2006 2:16 am    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

I’ve got the Archer dipole in my Europa. It is mounted about 6” forward of the inspection hole at the bottom of the fin. It works fine.

I would be concerned about flying with a transponder aerial mounted in the baggage area. The radiation is damaging to eyes etc and the aerial should be mounted as far away as possible from the crew.

More info on exposure risk is available at http://www.pfa.org.uk/Consultation%20and%20Lobbying/Mode%20S/Non-ionising%20Radiation%20Risks%20and%20Mode%20S.pdf

(The line might wrap so you may have to stitch)

Simon


From: owner-europa-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-europa-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of jimpuglise(at)comcast.net
Sent: 18 December 2006 03:39
To: europa-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Ground Plane


Al-



I have mine installed but have not used it yet. I think you are going to be much better off with a vertical dipole in the Europa than a ground plane. The Archer antenna the others spoke about is a vertical dipole. Mine is fastened to a piece of balsa wood that is fitted to the contour of the fuselage on the port side as far aft as possible. It is just about opposite the inspection port in the root of the rudder. I'll let you know how it works in a year or so.



Jim Puglise - A-283


[quote]
-------------- Original message --------------
From: "AlStills" <astills(at)cox.net>

> --> Europa-List message posted by: "AlStills"
>
> Hi all,
> I've been having a little problem with ATC reading my transponder all the
> time. I suspect a bit of shadowing.. I have the 2 1/2"-3" transponder
> antenna mounted
> upside down on a shelf on the rear corner of the baggage bay. I have a 6"
> steel ground plane mounted to the antenna. What size ground plane have
> others used
> successfully and where is your antenna mounted. ATC reads me better out of
> KGEU with a feed from Luke AFB while KDVT (where I'm hangered) gets their
> feed
> from Phoenix Sky Harbor airport. By far KDVT is worse than KGEU. I know
> there is difference in the feed from the different radars but n eed to R>>
Quote:
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europa flugzeug fabrik



Joined: 13 Feb 2006
Posts: 65
Location: North Coast, USA

PostPosted: Mon Dec 18, 2006 6:29 am    Post subject: Re: Ground Plane Reply with quote

Note that the linked PFA document does point out that transponder replies are very brief and occasional -- low average power, but no detailed studies done. There is an RF exposure calculator on ARRL’s web site which suggests, if one makes some plausible assumptions and fiddles with it, that a cell phone is more hazardous, and little evidence of a problem there so far. Many of us yak on cells (continuous xmission) in a year longer than we might spend flying in a year (occasional bursts of a like a millisecond each but at higher power). Distance from the body (a square in the formula) matters greatly re RF power.

Fred F.


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astills(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 18, 2006 6:43 am    Post subject: Ground plane Reply with quote

Thanks to all who replied. I'll trim my ground plane down and try that
first. If needed I've seen the Bob Archer antenna's and may switch.
Again thanks for the answers
Al Stills
N625AZ


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air.guerner(at)wanadoo.fr
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 18, 2006 11:06 am    Post subject: ground plane Reply with quote

Hi Al,<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

I have been looking at the antennas on composites airplanes (Lancairs, Glasairs, etc…) for years and the fact is that most builders install all antennas inside the airframe for obvious drag reduction, except for XPDR and DME antennas. Of course I am talking about glass, not carbon fiber airframes. XPDR and DME works in the 1030- 1090 MHz frequency range and are therefore more sensitive to shadowing and any less than perfect installation. Best practice is to install the antenna outside, pointing downwards, on the belly of the aircraft, with the appropriate ground plane. Minimum size of the ground plane is 4 wave length in diameter. <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />10 inch diameter, .025 inch thick aluminum is suggested in the litterature. Another thing is to make sure your BNC connectors (both center wire and shielding) are soldered not just crimped, as this warrants a better contact in the long term and a better reliability.

Good flights

Remi



Time: 04:27:46 PM PST US
From: "AlStills" <astills(at)cox.net (astills(at)cox.net)>
Subject: Ground Plane
Hi all,
I've been having a little problem with ATC reading my transponder all the
time. I suspect a bit of shadowing.. I have the 2 1/2"-3" transponder
antenna mounted
upside down on a shelf on the rear corner of the baggage bay. I have a 6"
steel ground plane mounted to the antenna. What size ground plane have
others used
successfully and where is your antenna mounted. ATC reads me better out of
KGEU with a feed from Luke AFB while KDVT (where I'm hangered) gets their
feed
from Phoenix Sky Harbor airport. By far KDVT is worse than KGEU. I know
there is difference in the feed from the different radars but need to get
rid of most of the
shadowing if possible. Sure would make me more presentable to the guys at
KDVT. (One of the busiest GA ariports in the nation)
Have about 8 hrs on the plane now and the grin is still in place. Gets even
bigger the more I fly!

Al Stills
N625AZ [quote][b]


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astills(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 18, 2006 3:41 pm    Post subject: ground plane Reply with quote

Remi,
Thanks for the info. I think I have the solution. Probably a couple of things and not just one.
Al Stills
N725AZ
--


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justin(at)systemwise.co.u
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 4:19 am    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

I like to think I saved weight in constructing a backplane for my transponder aerial by using tin foil. I constructed a flat 12” by 14” backplane using two layers of bid, On a glass surface I put one layer down and then some drinking straws across for stiffening and then a second layer. This produced a flat surface which I then covered with cooking tinfoil. The aerial was mounted in the middle and the whole lot stuck to the inside wall of the fuselage as far back as was practical. It needed two legs made from rolled up paper with scraps of bid wound round them to support it inboard. This has worked well, needs no maintenance and is not too heavy. I suspect the weight saving is minimal but the backplane is huge and works well.

Merry Christmas and safe flying to all.
Justin Kennedy
G-ZTED
[quote][b]


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grahamsingleton(at)btinte
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 6:26 am    Post subject: Ground Plane Reply with quote

Justin
only downside is possible corrosion of the connection to the cable
braid. Might be worth finding a silver loaded resin to add long term
reliability
Graham
btw I think your wing roots are the nicest I've seen. I bet the wind
sighs when it flows over them Wink

Justin Kennedy wrote:

Quote:
I like to think I saved weight in constructing a backplane for my
transponder aerial by using tin foil. I constructed a flat 12” by 14”
backplane using two layers of bid, On a glass surface I put one layer
down and then some drinking straws across for stiffening and then a
second layer. This produced a flat surface which I then covered with
cooking tinfoil. The aerial was mounted in the middle and the whole
lot stuck to the inside wall of the fuselage as far back as was
practical. It needed two legs made from rolled up paper with scraps of
bid wound round them to support it inboard. This has worked well,
needs no maintenance and is not too heavy. I suspect the weight saving
is minimal but the backplane is huge and works well.

Merry Christmas and safe flying to all.

Justin Kennedy

G-ZTED



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