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I'm trying to build a small magnetic loop for 5W on at least 40m - 20m following ideas of G4ILO's wonder loop. For this, I'm using coax with a ~2mm copper core and ~1mm spacing to the braid (see 1st image below), with braid and core connected on the ends. I use 50cm of this cable for the coupling loop and 2.90m for the outer loop (which is not based on any calculation but on the length I had available). I use a 350pF variable capacitor with ~540° rotation. The antenna is placed ~12m above the ground.

I first placed both loops as circles (see 2nd image below), pretty much as the image on G4ILO's page. I could peak the noise level on 40m and dip it but not with a satisfying SWR at all. I couldn't peak the noise level on 20m and didn't try to dip it.

With some experimenting, I found out that RX improved significantly when the loops touched each other as much as possible, so I experimented with an egg-shape coupling loop inside a circular outer loop. This gave somewhat better results.

I then kept the coupling loop somewhat circular and made the outer loop pear-shape so that it fits around the coupling loop (see 3rd picture). This allows me to peak noise level on 40m and dip it with near-1:1 SWR. The dip is rather sharp and I need to retune every ~10kHz. I can hear a fair number of stations but don't get any results on the reverse beacon network / webSDRs when I CQ myself. Normally, I get several spots on the RBN (with a 20m dipole, up ~5m).
On 20m, I cannot peak noise level but I can dip to 1:1 SWR (perhaps there is so much noise on that band that the radio's AGC levels it, making it impossible to peak noise level?). The dip is much wider, I don't need to retune on 14.000 - 14.060 at all. However, also on this band no results from the RBN yet.

My question is twofold:

  1. I know that a 1:1 SWR does not have to be ideal (a dummy load also has 1:1 SWR). Is there a fundamental problem with my latest construction that allows me to get a 1:1 SWR but little radiation?

  2. What can I try to improve the current construction?

coax used construction with circular loops construction with pear-shape outer loop capacitor

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    $\begingroup$ The wider the dip (bandwidth), the more losses it has. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 29, 2017 at 16:14
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    $\begingroup$ I take exception to G4ILO's claims. If you notice in his page, the DX he has worked with that loop were all within Europe. And neither does he say that he has done A/B tests between that and a dipole. Sorry, but it's much lossier than a dipole. Check out Owen Duffy's links from my STL page. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 29, 2017 at 16:35
  • $\begingroup$ It's hard to tell, but in this picture it appears that you might be connecting your feedline to the center conductor of the small loop on the left, but to the braid on the right. Your feedline should connect to the braid on both sides. (And it's OK to connect the center conductor to the braid on both sides of the loop.) $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 3, 2017 at 21:40
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    $\begingroup$ @MikeWaters the braid and center conductor are joined on both sides. I shrank the images to make them consume less bandwidth, sorry about that. $\endgroup$
    – user885
    Commented Sep 3, 2017 at 21:42
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    $\begingroup$ @MikeWaters I edited the question. Here I also connected the braid and the center conductor on both sides. The cable is soldered directly on the capacitor. $\endgroup$
    – user885
    Commented Sep 3, 2017 at 21:51

4 Answers 4

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Getting this antenna to perform, as with any electrically small antenna, is a question of minimizing losses. Without being able to test your particular design it's difficult to say exactly what the losses may be, but here are some possible culprits:

  • Dielectric and conductive losses due to coupling into the wall and things inside it. Try moving it away from the wall a bit.
  • Resistive losses in contacts. The sliding contacts in the variable capacitor are often not great. Other connections through binding posts, etc are ideally silver or gold plated, and be sure they are clean and snug.

It also appears for the coupling loop you are using the center conductor of a piece of coax, whereas G4ILO uses a plain insulated wire. It should still be possible to make it work, though if your objective is to replicate a working design you should probably start by replicating it exactly before experimenting with modifications.

Losses can be further reduced by using large tubing, wide solid strap, soldered connections throughout, vacuum variable capacitors, etc. However, that would detract from the qualities of being small, cheap, easy to build, and portable. Any such antenna is necessarily going to compromise efficiency, but that doesn't mean it can't be efficient enough.

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    $\begingroup$ Exactly! In this type of antenna, the Rr is in the milliohms, so we absolutely need to minimize losses. That is why hams construct them out of large diameter copper tubing and tune them with vacuum variable capacitors. Even connecting the capacitor to the loop with copper braid introduces considerably more loss than using wide copper strap. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 29, 2017 at 16:26
  • $\begingroup$ @MikeWaters. All true and well said, Mike. The primary reason for the vacuum variable capacitor, however, is to withstand the high voltages that develop when using a 100 watt transmitter. A more basic capacitor will often suffice at QRPp levels. $\endgroup$
    – Glenn W9IQ
    Commented Aug 30, 2017 at 12:24
  • $\begingroup$ @GlennW9IQ High voltage is certainly part of it. But a major consideration is the lack of sliding contacts. In STLs, the contacts on receive-type variables have been known to turn red hot from the high current even before they arc. There is a ham who makes contactless, wide-spaced butterfly capacitors specifically for STLs. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 30, 2017 at 14:23
  • $\begingroup$ @MikeWaters. That is a very good point. Butterfly caps are also a nice option. $\endgroup$
    – Glenn W9IQ
    Commented Aug 30, 2017 at 14:46
  • $\begingroup$ I should move my comments here to an answer. (Or someone else can. :-) $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 30, 2017 at 19:49
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Small loop antennas require great attention to construction details. This is due to the (in)efficiency of a small loop antenna.

By comparison, when constructing a simple half wave dipole, a few ohms of RF resistance has very little effect on its performance. This is because the radiation resistance of a dipole is around 73 ohms. So an additional few ohms of resistance due to construction techniques only reduces the efficiency to 95%. This would hardly be noticed.

By comparison, your small loop antenna has a radiation resistance of 0.005 ohms on 40 meters and 0.087 ohms on 20 meters. With just 1/2 ohm of RF resistance, the efficiency of your small loop antenna will be 1% on 40 meters and 15% on 20 meters. And it is difficult to hold the RF (not DC) resistance to only 1/2 ohm.

Using the 1/2 ohm numbers from above, the gain of your small loop antenna will be -18 dBi on 40 meters and -6.5 dBi on 20 meters. This means that a 5 watt transmitter will sound like a 0.025 watt and a 0.35 watt transmitter respectively compared to the same transmitter connected to a typical backyard 1/2 wave dipole. Said another way, you would be 4 and 2 S-units lower respectively. And remember, your actual efficiency is probably much worse than this example.

So construction details are very important. Some thoughts:

  • Use copper tubing for the loops. The larger the diameter of the tubing, the better. It is the exterior surface area that matters. No current exists inside the tube.

  • Solder all joints.

  • Use wide copper straps in favor of wires.

  • Increase the diameter of the main loop to improve the efficiency of the antenna. The RF resistance goes up proportionally to the circumference but the radiation resistance goes up by the power of 4 so any increase in circumference is significantly beneficial.

  • As Mike Waters pointed out in comments, the use of a butterfly or vacuum style capacitor will further reduce RF resistance by eliminating the mechanical wiper mechanism found on standard variable capacitors.

Edit:

I would also like to expand a bit on the point Phil made regarding the proximity of other objects to the antenna. A small loop antenna has very strongly concentrated near field energy. This means that anything close to the loop will likely absorb, reflect, or re-radiate RF energy. This will not only affect the tuning and efficiency of the loop but it can also be quite dangerous - particularly to biological entities like pets, plants, and humans. Keep all objects as far away from the loop as possible.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks for the explanation. I knew about these construction details, but hoped that G4ILO was right in claiming it wasn't needed for QRP. Perhaps he is, but then I am not able to reproduce it. I tried several things from Phil's answer to no avail; unfortunately most of the suggestions in this answer are out of my reach at the moment. I'll see if I can get a longwire up somewhere... $\endgroup$
    – user885
    Commented Sep 3, 2017 at 8:37
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    $\begingroup$ Take note that you do not need to connect the inner wire of the coax to anything as skin effect keeps all of the RF on the outside braid of the coax. Focus on connecting more of the braid in order to reduce your RF resistance at the junction points. $\endgroup$
    – Glenn W9IQ
    Commented Sep 3, 2017 at 12:09
  • $\begingroup$ I thought connecting them would reduce resistance. Thanks for this, but unfortunately I didn't manage to get better results yet. $\endgroup$
    – user885
    Commented Sep 3, 2017 at 21:07
  • $\begingroup$ @keelan The RF resistance is all about the external surface area of the conductor. The larger the external surface area, the lower the RF resistance. The center wire plays no role whatsoever in this design. You could pull it out and nothing would change. $\endgroup$
    – Glenn W9IQ
    Commented Sep 4, 2017 at 7:27
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I understand people like to use coax for antenna experiments but in this case I don't think its a good choice.

That outer loop diameter is too small for 40 meters and it is a wire when it really needs to be a tube.

What I would suggest is making this thing again but using copper tubing for the outer loop and simple insulated wire for the inner loop(inner loop thickness does not matter). Use it for transmitting on 20 meters and up. If you have a big enough capacitor you can TUNE 40 meters but as you have discovered it will not transmit very well.

For a quick experiment all you need is wire and something to hold the wire in roughly a square or circular shape for receiving purposes. You can make these multi-turn and receive all the way down to broadcast AM band.

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I suggest you disconnect the loop from the central part of the variable cap . Instead connect to the other section...you then have a more efficient cap without the losses of the mechanical contact. By using both sides or both sections you convert the cap into a poor man's butterfly cap

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  • $\begingroup$ Hello Craig, and welcome to this site! And thanks for a great first answer. :-) Yes, those brass contacts can glow red-hot because their their resistance is much higher than the radiation resistance of the loop, which is in the milliohm range! $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 13, 2020 at 2:49

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