| Stefan,   >> Is it possible to 'build' a cardioid 
antenna by combing the signals of E and H within SpecLab? It is only a mixing of 
these two signals with a different 'weight', right? This could be done in the 
'left to right output amp', right?    Yes, this should be possible, although I never 
actually tried it that way. The weight factor can be made positive or negative 
for pointing the main lobe eg. west or east. Note that you will have to 
adjust the analog hardware such that the phase difference between the whip 
and the loop channel is either 0° or 180°, so that the signal from the 
unwanted direction can cancel.   > I assume i will need a relay to select one of 
the two loops to feed it to the RX, but what happens if i use the combined loop 
signal to try that?
 If you use the 90° combined signal, you still 
get a null in the back side of the cardioid - this is what can be selected 
as "single, sharp cardioid" in SpecLab's RDF menue.  Despite of having only 
two input channels, you can conveniently point the antenna in any direction 
by software. The difference to the "classic" cardioid pattern is 
that the "other" loop antenna also contributes signals from the sides, 
effectively reducing the forward gain and making the null sharper ( |cos| 
instead of cos^2 pattern).    Usually that sharper null is more of a 
disadvantage, for example if you want to suppress QRN from a 
range of angles around the back side (eg. statics from southeast 
Europe). But occasionally sharpness can help to null 
an undesired signal coming in from a direction near that of 
the desired signal.    All the best, Markus (DF6NM)     
 Sent: Monday, June 01, 2015 1:39 
AM Subject: Re: LF: Small MF ferrite 
antenna games 
 Hi Markus, 
 Yes yes, great ideas. I will go 
on step by step. First i need to configure the link in stereo mode and see if it 
runs stable. The mono-stream needs about 220 kBit/s. It's availability is fine 
now over 2.4 km even in slight rain. I assume it will work. If this runs stable 
then i can build a stereo-RX.
 Is it possible to 'build' a cardioid antenna by 
combing the signals of E and H within SpecLab? It is only a mixing of these two 
signals with a different 'weight', right? This could be done in the 'left to 
right output amp', right? I assume i will need a relay to select one of the two 
loops to feed it to the RX, but what happens if i use the combined loop signal 
to try that?
 
 73, Stefan
 
 
 Am 27.05.2015 12:32, schrieb Markus 
Vester:
 
  Yes Stefan, 
  bring colour into your life ;-) Even after more than 10 years, I still 
  sometimes enjoy just sitting and watching things roll by on the colour-RDF 
  screen.    With crossed 
  loops and an E-field antenna you have a number of options.    1. The 
  colour-DF scheme takes the E-field on one channel and a 90°-combination from 
  two loops on the second, providing omnidirectional reception with 360° RDF 
  functionality. The combiner is simple to make, and you'll have to add a second 
  RX channel. A stereo soundcard can be used, and SpecLab has everything needed 
  onboard. Having a 475 kHz directional grabber available in Heidelberg would 
  surely be very useful to the community.   2. Then you can 
  hardware-combine whip and loop for a unidirectional cardioid pattern. This is 
  equivalent to K9AY or similar antennas, which on LF have provided outstanding 
  results for a few observers in quiet locations. The crossed loops can be used 
  with electronic steering or a small goniometer, which allow you to virtually 
  rotate the cardioid in the shack. Note that the phase-based colour-DF scheme 
  still works if the cardoid antenna instead of the whip is used as intensity 
  source. I have tried this on LF, but in my location SNR gain was not up to 
  expectations because my loops are too much affected by noise from underground 
  cables.    3. The next 
  step would be downconverting and digitizing all three channels separately, 
  allowing you to steer the cardioid by software and even monitor different beam 
  headings simultaneously. But a three channel digitizer is not so easily 
  available, and you'll need dedicated software for postprocessing. Paul 
  Nicholson can do this at VLF, using three stereo soundcards augmented by GPS 
  ticks, and a posteriori synchronisation in his own software.    All the 
  best,-----Ursprüngliche 
  Mitteilung-----Markus (DF6NM)
 
 Von: DK7FC <[email protected]>
 An: rsgb_lf_group <[email protected]>
 Verschickt: Mi, 27 Mai 2015 2:13 am
 Betreff: LF: Small MF 
  ferrite antenna games
 
 MF, 
Today i've played a bit with a small ferrite antenna for 630m. 
It is 14 cm long and has 8 mm diameter. 
Without any calculations i wound a winding of unknown number of turns  
around the rod and quickly found C about 200 pF at resonance (475 kHz). 
Then i added a few turns for a 50 Ohm output (measuring the voltage of  
an induced signal at resonance. When applying 50 Ohm, the voltage has to  
decrease to 50%) to the RX. 
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/19882028/MF/small%20MF%20ferrite%20antenna.jpg 
As expected the input signal is to low, it does not rise the noise of  
the RX, so i'm missing about 20 dB. It can't be much more though because  
i can receive IQ2MI/B clearly in QRSS-30 on 476.180 kHz with 25 dB SNR  
in 122 mHz, see attachment. 
The antenna is hanging in 6m AGL in a tree in my garden... 
I'm playing with the idea of a rotary H-field RX antenna for MF, maybe  
in combination with a stereo receiver and a E-field antenna. Oh and  
maybe with a colour spectrogram as known from DF6NM. A lot of things to  
do :-) 
73, Stefan 
 PS: Yesterday, in a CW QSO with DK6SX/p on the loop he once completely  
disappered into QSO which never happend before when receiving on a  
omni-directional antenna. So i guess the colour changes in such a  
spectrogram must be quite interesting and informative... 
 |