WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

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WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

WA3WSJ

Hello all,

I received lots of emails concerning my "Bead-Wire Antenna."
I've decided to post on the reflectors rather than send out to each
Individual op.

Here's what I did to make my antenna. I went out to my local craft store
called " The Rag Shop" and bought a 40' spool of flexible bead wire.
This stuff is very strong, has a clear tough plastic coating over it,
but won't take solder. My wire has seven strands to it. It comes on a
plastic spool that's about 2.75" in diameter and 5/8" thick. It even has
a clear plastic cover that snaps over half the spool to keep the wire
etc on the spool. The wire measures .012" in diameter so it's very small
and light. In fact my 40' of wire and 40' fishing line with spool
weighs-in at less than 1oz!

I tie one end of the bead wire to 40' of 30lb test fishing line. On the
on the fishing line I tie a loop. I tie about an 1" loop on the end of
the fishing line so I can attach a 1oz lead sinker. The sinker is one
that is egg shaped and has a wire loop at the top. In the field I simlpy
slip the fishing line loop through the wire loop and double back over
the sinker. This makes for a solid tie that can be taken off easily
anytime. This sinker makes it easy to throw up the bead wire into a tree
too.

At present I use three ground radials each 16' in length made from #26
black stealh wire. I plan to make my ground radials out of the bead-wire
too to save on space and weight.

I tried this setup yesterday in my back yard with my KX1. On 30m I had
4.0W out with a 1.0:1 swr. On 20m I have 3.8w out with a swr of 1.2:1
and on 40m I have 2.8w out with a swr of 1.1:1.

My entire trail radio package weighs-in at 1.6lb. Here's what I use on
the AT:

Radio:   KX1 with 30m option
Battery: Powerizer 11.1V 1800mah 3-cell Lithium Polymer ~4.5oz
Antenna: Bead-Wire Ant. Attached with 2-post to bnc adapter
Paddle:  AT Paddle Mini (plugs directly into KX1, 3.5mm stero plug)

The entire package stores in a small camera case!

p.s. You can buy silver coated bead wire to solder to, but it's
expensive!

72,
Ed,WA3WSJ



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RE: WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

Steve-292
Ed,
Some of this stuff is plastic coated steel or stainless steel, similar to a
fishing leader.  This could explain the difficulty in soldering to it.

If it's truly not copper based, I would be concerned about potential
resistive losses for long antenna runs.

Is there a way to determine what material this wire is made from?

Steve
aa8af

> -----Original Message-----
>
> I received lots of emails concerning my "Bead-Wire Antenna."
> I've decided to post on the reflectors rather than send out
> to each Individual op.
>
> Here's what I did to make my antenna. I went out to my local
> craft store called " The Rag Shop" and bought a 40' spool of
> flexible bead wire.
> This stuff is very strong, has a clear tough plastic coating
> over it, but won't take solder. My wire has seven strands to
> it. It comes on a plastic spool that's about 2.75" in

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RE: WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Since RF current flows only along the very surface of the conductor, the
silver plated stuff ought to be very good even if a bit expensive!

Ron AC7AC

-----Original Message-----

Ed,
Some of this stuff is plastic coated steel or stainless steel, similar to a
fishing leader.  This could explain the difficulty in soldering to it.

If it's truly not copper based, I would be concerned about potential
resistive losses for long antenna runs.

Is there a way to determine what material this wire is made from?

Steve
aa8af

> -----Original Message-----
>
> I received lots of emails concerning my "Bead-Wire Antenna." I've
> decided to post on the reflectors rather than send out to each
> Individual op.
>
> Here's what I did to make my antenna. I went out to my local
> craft store called " The Rag Shop" and bought a 40' spool of
> flexible bead wire.
> This stuff is very strong, has a clear tough plastic coating
> over it, but won't take solder. My wire has seven strands to
> it. It comes on a plastic spool that's about 2.75" in

_

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Re: WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

Marshall Jose
In reply to this post by Steve-292
Since the wire is quite thin, the resonant element which results will
have a rather high-Q and therefore best used for a narrow range (such as
the CW sub-band). My wife does beading and uses the stuff; it looks to
me like stranded stainless wire with a nylon jacket.

My guess is that the high Q will win out over the skin effect of the SS.
Furthermore, although nylon is lossy at RF, that usually applies where
the tangential electric field is relatively intense, such as when the
nylon serves as an insulator or a capacitor dielectric, rather than
merely as a jacket.

I also think Ed will have loads of fun in spite of the losses. :) Stay
dry, man!

Marshall, WA3VPZ

Steve wrote:

> Ed,
> Some of this stuff is plastic coated steel or stainless steel, similar
> to a
> fishing leader.  This could explain the difficulty in soldering to it.
>
> If it's truly not copper based, I would be concerned about potential
> resistive losses for long antenna runs.
>
> Is there a way to determine what material this wire is made from?
>
> Steve
> aa8af
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> >
> > I received lots of emails concerning my "Bead-Wire Antenna."
> > I've decided to post on the reflectors rather than send out
> > to each Individual op.
> >
> > Here's what I did to make my antenna. I went out to my local
> > craft store called " The Rag Shop" and bought a 40' spool of
> > flexible bead wire.
>

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RE: WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Doing the math, a wire self-resonant at 7 MHz exhibits 2:1 SWR limits that
vary with the wire size as follows:

#8 wire = 280 kHz

#12 wire = 270 kHz

#30 wire = 160 kHz

Since the antenna is probably less than self-resonant length (1/2 wave or
1/4 wave over a perfect ground) the bandwidths will be greater than that
owing to the matching network or ground losses. However, these numbers
provide some idea of how the size of the wire affects bandwidth.

The original poster was using a KX1. He didn't say, but I'd assume he's
using an ATU, perhaps the KXAT1 built into the KX1.

Ron AC7AC



-----Original Message-----
Since the wire is quite thin, the resonant element which results will
have a rather high-Q and therefore best used for a narrow range (such as
the CW sub-band). My wife does beading and uses the stuff; it looks to
me like stranded stainless wire with a nylon jacket.

My guess is that the high Q will win out over the skin effect of the SS.
Furthermore, although nylon is lossy at RF, that usually applies where
the tangential electric field is relatively intense, such as when the
nylon serves as an insulator or a capacitor dielectric, rather than
merely as a jacket.

I also think Ed will have loads of fun in spite of the losses. :) Stay
dry, man!

Marshall, WA3VPZ

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RE: [QRP-L] WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna

Michael Baker-3
In reply to this post by WA3WSJ
Hi Ed,
        I find your SWR readings a bit contradictory to my antenna modeling
in EZNEC.
        Modeling 4 radials 17.28' each and a radiator of the same length
with the radials 7' off the ground and the ends and the feed point and feed
end of the radials at 10 feet I get a SWR of about 1.6 to 1.  If I change
the radiator to a 40' length and feed it the exact same way and heights I
get a feed impedance of 325 ohms and a reactance of -1147 Ohms for 14.06
MHz. which isn't what I would call acceptable.
        For 7.04 MHz I get it near perfect with SWR of 1.19 to 1, at 59.5
Ohms and -1.169 Ohms reactance.  Very Nice.  
        30 meters comes out at 10.12 MHz with 283 Ohms and +828.7 Ohms
reactance.  SWR of 54.2 to 1.  Not very nice.
        So, unless you are running a tuner and that was the best your tuner
would adapt the antenna to your rig, then I can see where you got your
numbers.  Either way, the antenna on any band except 40 meters is not going
to radiate very well UNLESS you install the tuner AT THE FEED POINT of the
antenna so the COAX is not contributing to the losses in the system.  Even
then I would recommend looking at the radiation pattern and angle of attack
for that antenna and see it is what you wanted.
        A 20 meter ground plane antenna as I first described has a very nice
single lobe pattern with an angle of attack of 20 degrees and a very
acceptable SWR. On 40 meters with the 40' radiator it runs 22 Degrees angle
of attack so again, a nice antenna with a very nice SWR.  Make the entire
antenna as a 40 meter ground plane (double the 20 meter wire lengths with
same height above ground) and you get 1.12 SWR will NIL for reactance and
the same attack angle of 22 degrees. Very close to your 40 foot radiator
model.
        So, how did you get your SWR readings?  Tuner or No Tuner?  And
located where?

Best 73 72

Michael Baker  K7DD
[hidden email]

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]]
On Behalf Of Edward R. Breneiser
Sent: Friday, October 06, 2006 7:55 AM
To: [hidden email]; [hidden email]; [hidden email]
Cc: [hidden email]
Subject: [QRP-L] WA3WSJ: Bead-Wire Antenna


Hello all,

I received lots of emails concerning my "Bead-Wire Antenna."
I've decided to post on the reflectors rather than send out to each
Individual op.

Here's what I did to make my antenna. I went out to my local craft store
called " The Rag Shop" and bought a 40' spool of flexible bead wire.
This stuff is very strong, has a clear tough plastic coating over it,
but won't take solder. My wire has seven strands to it. It comes on a
plastic spool that's about 2.75" in diameter and 5/8" thick. It even has
a clear plastic cover that snaps over half the spool to keep the wire
etc on the spool. The wire measures .012" in diameter so it's very small
and light. In fact my 40' of wire and 40' fishing line with spool
weighs-in at less than 1oz!

I tie one end of the bead wire to 40' of 30lb test fishing line. On the
on the fishing line I tie a loop. I tie about an 1" loop on the end of
the fishing line so I can attach a 1oz lead sinker. The sinker is one
that is egg shaped and has a wire loop at the top. In the field I simlpy
slip the fishing line loop through the wire loop and double back over
the sinker. This makes for a solid tie that can be taken off easily
anytime. This sinker makes it easy to throw up the bead wire into a tree
too.

At present I use three ground radials each 16' in length made from #26
black stealh wire. I plan to make my ground radials out of the bead-wire
too to save on space and weight.

I tried this setup yesterday in my back yard with my KX1. On 30m I had
4.0W out with a 1.0:1 swr. On 20m I have 3.8w out with a swr of 1.2:1
and on 40m I have 2.8w out with a swr of 1.1:1.

My entire trail radio package weighs-in at 1.6lb. Here's what I use on
the AT:

Radio:   KX1 with 30m option
Battery: Powerizer 11.1V 1800mah 3-cell Lithium Polymer ~4.5oz
Antenna: Bead-Wire Ant. Attached with 2-post to bnc adapter
Paddle:  AT Paddle Mini (plugs directly into KX1, 3.5mm stero plug)

The entire package stores in a small camera case!

p.s. You can buy silver coated bead wire to solder to, but it's
expensive!

72,
Ed,WA3WSJ



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