A Short Study of NVIS
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Go to www.ve3fyn.ca/files for the EZNEC source files used for this article.
When I started building my radio shack in Atikokan, I wanted a stable way of communicating with nearby Thunder Bay, Dryden, Sioux Narrows and Kenora. These communities are all in the 200 kilometre range. That's where many of my friends are, and those are the communities I would want to contact in the case of an emergency. Even Winnipeg and North Bay (about 500 kilometres) were generally out of reach of my vertical HF antenna - I needed a way to connect to these places beyond VHF, beyond the groundwave, and within the skip zone.
Enter NVIS, or "near vertical incident sky-wave." Simply put, this system optimizes HF antennas for a near-vertical takeoff. What goes almost straight up comes almost straight down, reaching regional targets.
I read many articles on NVIS before I started. Some were very good, but many were contradictory. Some, for instance, advocated antennas seven feet above ground, while others recommended I shoot for 90 feet.I decided to do some modeling using EZNEC. I discovered what works best (at least in theory) if you have an infinite yard and a tolerate spouse, and what works best in some more constrained situations.
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This plot shows the increasing vertical gain as the antenna moves from 5 feet (0.019 wavelengths) to 40 feet (0.15 wavelengths) above ground. |
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This plot shows the degradation of the vertical signal after 40 feet. The 60 foot plot (blue) is nearly identical, but by 90 feet, it is significantly attenuated. |
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This azimuth view of an NVIS dipole at the 70 degree point shows only 0.76 dB attenuation from dBmax off the ends of the antenna. This antenna is a dipole 32 feet (1/8 wavelength) off the ground, and tuned to 80 metres. |
| Dst (km) | 50 | 75 | 100 | 125 | 150 | 175 | 200 | 225 | 250 | 275 | 300 | 400 | 500 |
| Low (°) | 81 | 77 | 73 | 69 | 65 | 61 | 58 | 55 | 52 | 49 | 47 | 39 | 33 |
| High (°) | 87 | 86 | 84 | 83 | 81 | 80 | 78 | 77 | 75 | 74 | 73 | 67 | 62 |
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The primary plot is a 20' high 40 metre dipole with no reflector. Vertical gain = 6.03 dBi
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The primary plot is a 16' high 40 metre dipole with no reflector. Vertical gain = 5.31 dBi |
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The primary plot is a 7' high 40 metre dipole with no reflector. Vertical gain = 0.72 dBi |
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This plot shows the advantage of a reflector at low elevations. The blue plot (80M_7ft) shows an 80 metre dipole seven feet from the ground. The primary plot shows the same antenna with three reflectors placed on the ground. One is under the dipole, and the other two are each three feet to a side. The gain is 3.71dB - enough to warrant running the wires.
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Wire dipoles for HF are long. And, as we've demonstrated, even for vertical skywave applications, they're high. Yard sizes, finances, family and neighbour relations often inhibit our ability to erect the dream antenna In my case, my yard is only 110 feet long. That posed a problem in trying to erect a 123 foot long antenna. Further, I'd imposed on myself a height restriction of 24 feet, assuming that an antenna much higher than that would elicit comments from the neighbours. I also wanted in my antenna to avoid the use of an antenna tuner outside that of my HF rig. So, the SWR in my antennas had to remain within 3:1 across the band. So, cutting the wire and using a random wire tuner was not an option.
That basically left me with three options for shortening the antenna:
Again, antenna modeling helped. I modeled each of the three options to assess their impact on vertical and horizontal gain.
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This plot compares a full-length 123' dipole at 24 feet elevation (primary), with two other options:
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Dropping the ends is clearly the best option for several reasons:
These results make sense. Most of the current is in the centre of the antenna. Keeping the centre section high off the ground will give us the greatest gain. Dropping the ends allows us to maintain SWR without sacrificing gain, as little is transmitted from the ends in any case.
Now, if you need to shorten your antenna, but overall height is not an issue, a Vee antenna may make sense.
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In this model, the primary plot is a dipole at 51 feet high. At vertical, it shows 1.77 dB gain more than the same dipole at 24 feet. However, a Vee antenna 24 feet at the centre and 51 feet at the ends shows virtually the same gain at the high angles, and less gain at the low elevations (about 2 dB less at 20 degrees). |
This vee antenna retains the gain of a dipole at the high angles, and reduces it slightly at the low angles. This antenna has the advantage of reducing multi-path distortion somewhat, but having a weaker groundwave signal. It also requires less feedline. (Saving 25 feet of RG 213 cable will reduce your line loss by a whopping 0.1 dB.)
In spite of the modelling, I found that it was far easier to match SWR by running an inverted vee. For the 80 metre antenna, I ran an inverted vee from 24 feet high at the centre, to eight feet at the ends. Due to my small yard, I still had to run the ends of the wire straight down. The 40 metre antenna is a true inverted vee four feet below the larger antenna.
Both antennas cover their full band well within my required 3:1 SWR. In fact, I found that the 40 metre wire will tune nicely to 80 metres, and to 30 metres. You may get by with just the one.
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This shows the antenna design: An 80 metre inverted vee is installed 24 feet at the centre, and 8 feet at the ends. In the actual installation, the last four feet drop straight down. A 40 metre inverted vee is at 20 feet.
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Does it work? It works very well for communications within 250 kilometres, and will drive a decent signal up to 500 kilometres. At that point, you can swith to your vertical, or a beam. If you take the time to model it, this is a highly efficient and extremely cheap antenna project. And it fills the gap between local and DX communications.
... 73, de VE3FYN
Last update:
24-Mar-2009 3:05 AM
Web page by: Warren Paulson