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Home of the Mystery Antenna |
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Sunday, December 13th, 2009 3:09pm |
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The design of the Mystery antenna was inspired by an article written by James E. Taylor, W2OZH, in which he described a low profile collinear coaxial array. This antenna covers 80 to 6 meters with low feed point impedance and will work with most radios, with or without an antenna tuner. It is approximately 100 feet long, can handle the legal limit, and is easy and inexpensive to build. It’s similar to a G5RV but a much better performer especially on 20 meters. The W5GI Mystery antenna, erected at various heights and configurations, is currently being used by thousands of amateurs throughout the world. Feedback from users indicates that the antenna has met or exceeded all performance criteria. The “mystery” part of the antenna comes from the fact that it is difficult, if not impossible, to model and explain why the antenna works as well as it does. The antenna is especially well suited to hams who are unable to erect towers and rotating arrays. All that's needed is two vertical supports (trees work well) about 130 feet apart to permit installation of wire antennas at about 25 feet above ground. The W5GI Multi-band Mystery Antenna is a fundamentally a collinear antenna comprising three half waves in-phase on 20 meters with a half-wave 20 meter line transformer. It may sound and look like a G5RV but it is a substantially different antenna on 20 meters. Louis Varney’s antenna, although three half waves long, was an out-of-phase aerial. Mr. Varney had two specific reasons for selecting a 3 half waves on 20... he wanted a four-lobe radiation pattern, at least unity gain and a low feed point impedance. The Mystery antenna, on the other hand, presents a six-lobe pattern on 20 meters, gain broadside to the antenna, and also low feed point impedance to simplify matching the antenna to the rig. Additionally, the Mystery antenna is designed to work at least as well, on the other HF bands as a G5RV. In short, the Mystery antenna is a sky wire that incorporates the advantages of a 3 element collinear and the G5RV antenna. In its standard configuration, a collinear antenna uses phase reversing stubs added at the ends of a center fed dipole. These stubs put the instantaneous RF current in the end elements in phase with that in the center element. You can make these phase reversing stubs from open wire line or coaxial cable. Normally, a shorted quarter-wave stub is used, but an open-ended half wave stub would also work. The problem is that the dangling stubs are unwieldy and or unsightly. An article written by James E. Taylor, “COCOA-A Collinear Coaxial Array,” published in 73 Amateur Radio, August 1989, describes a low profile collinear coaxial array. According to Taylor, when you apply a RF voltage to the center conductor at the open end, the stub causes a voltage phase lag of 180 degrees at the adjacent coax shield. This happens because the RF is delayed by one quarter-cycle as it passes from left to right, inside the coax to the shorted (opposite) end. There’s another quarter-cycle delay as the wave passes back from right to left inside the coax and emerges on the shield at the open end. Add up the delays and you get a total time delay of one-half cycle, or 180 degrees. In essence, the coax section serves two purposes: it provides the necessary delay and provides part of the radiating element in a collinear array. The first prototypes of the Mystery antenna used the Taylor formulas, which which called for cutting the wires to a quarter wave length using the formula 234/f(Mhz) and the coax, using the same formula, but applying an appropriate velocity factor. The first version of my antenna worked well on 20 meters but failed as a multi-band antenna. The second antenna was built with constructed with the coax cut to the same length as the wire. This was done with the belief that perhaps the coax didn’t behave like coax and therefore the velocity factor wasn’t applicable. Surprisingly, the new antenna performed exceptionally well on 20 meters, had low SWR and performed just as well on the other HF bands and 6 meters as my G5RV reference antenna. Step-by-Step Construction The W5GI Multi-band Mystery Antenna looks like a plain dipole (see figure1 and photo A below) and is very simple to build.
Figure 1 - Schematic drawing of the
W5GI Multi-band Mystery Antenna. See text
Builders of the Mystery antenna will need the following materials:
The antenna can be built in less than an hour when you have the above materials. When you’re ready to proceed, perform the following steps:
Table 1 below depicts the typical SWR results for the W5GI multi-band antenna:
On-the-Air Performance On 20 meters, you should expect 3-6 dB gain over a dipole and a 6-lobe radiation pattern with an elongated figure 8 pattern perpendicular to the plane of the antenna. This is typical of a 3 element collinear array. For a simple explanation of collinear arrays read "Troubleshooting Antennas and Feed lines" by Ralph Tyrrell, W1TF. On all other bands the antenna performs like a G5RV, which is really a random length dipole on all but 20 meters. M. Walter Maxwell, in "Reflections II, Transmission Lines and Antennas", aptly describes this phenomenon. Several users report it is possible to use the antenna on 160 meters but you will need to connect the twin lead together at the point where it connects to the coax. On 160, the antenna performs like a Marconi. Those who have used the antenna on 160 say the “GI Mystery” antenna is a quieter receiving aerial compared to other 160-meter antennas. As for the theory of operation, it remains a mystery. At least three “experts” tried computer modeling the antenna. All three rendered completely different findings. You will enjoy building a W5GI Multi-band Mystery Antenna! Many hams has done so and find it to have been a fun project and an excellent performer.
Testimonials: Hello John, I am
now a very proud owner of the W5GI antenna! I just had to send you a
report. I built it from the Wireman kit. Nice work my friend. Hope to hear you on the bands soon. 73, Mike "N9PYS" Click HERE to hear a N9PYS 40 meter soundbite recorded 9/4/04 by K4QKY during the passage of Hurricane Frances.
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Hi John,
I read the CQ article a while back and was interested in the antenna. Then I had a qso with you a year ago or so and you were using it. I finally got around to building the MA the other day and it works great. It works better than the 80m windom or g5rv that I had up and it sure sounds "quiet", with sigs popping out nicely. I'm glad I took the 2 hours to put it together and hoist it up..it was fun and easy to build...tnx for sharing a good idea. 73, Brian "N8UV"
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