Discone antenna
A discone antenna is a monopole version of a biconical antenna, in which one of the cones is replaced by a disc. It is usually mounted vertically, with the disc at the top and the cone beneath. Omnidirectional, vertically polarized and with gain similar to a dipole, it is exceptionally wideband, offering a frequency range ratio of up to approximately 10:1. The radiation pattern in the vertical plane is quite narrow, making its sensitivity highest in the direction of the horizon and rather less for signals coming from relatively close by. HistoryOn February 6, 1945, Armig G. Kandoian of New York City was awarded U.S. patent number US 2368663 "Broad band antenna" (assignor to Federal Telephone and Radio Corporation, later merged with ITT Corporation), from an application made on May 15, 1943. Excerpt from the Kandoian patent:[1]
DescriptionThe discone antenna has a useful frequency range of at least 10 to 1.[2][3] When employed as a transmitting antenna, a properly constructed discone is just as efficient as an antenna designed for a more limited frequency range. The extra bandwidth comes from the controlled taper and large termination radius of the cone. The cone shape and flat disk disperse the local electric field. This reduces stored energy in the electric field, reducing antenna Q while also reducing losses. The elevation pattern might be distorted with grating lobes. SWR (standing wave ratio) is typically 1.5:1 or less over several octaves of frequency.[4] A discone antenna consists of three main parts: the disc, the cone, and the insulator.
Construction materialsA discone may be made from solid metal sheet (often copper), which is practical for small indoor UHF antennas, such as for Wi-Fi. At lower frequencies a sufficient number of metal wires or rods in a spoke configuration is often used to approximate a solid surface. This simplifies construction and reduces wind loading. The spokes may be made of stiff wire, brazing rods or even coat hanger wire. The minimum number of rods comprising the disc and cone is often quoted as being from 8 to 16. ApplicationsThe discone's wideband coverage makes it attractive in commercial, military, amateur radio and radio scanner applications. The discone's inherently wideband nature permits it to broadcast undesirable spurious emissions from faulty or improperly filtered transmitters. Extending low-frequency responseA vertical whip may be affixed to the center of the disc in order to extend the low frequency response, but this compromises efficiency at lower frequencies. Rather than be a true discone the functional mode changes to that of an asymmetrical vertical dipole with a thin upper element. In this configuration, at lower frequencies with a vertical element mounted above the disc, the antenna behaves like a sloped radial ground plane antenna. See alsoReferences
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