Mailing List lml@lancaironline.net Message #36885
From: Charles R. Patton <charles.r.patton@ieee.org>
Sender: <marv@lancaironline.net>
Subject: Re: [LML] ELT antenna
Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2006 11:14:05 -0400
To: <lml>
I had the same thoughts and had the occasion to measure a IVP under construction and as I recall the value was about 5 ohms which makes it to be about 5 ohms/square.  So against a nominal 50 ohms at the feed point, maybe 10% loss, which is not the worst thing in the world.    Therefore I would essentially think of carbon composite sheets as metal sheets and design accordingly.  I.e., if the antenna is inside a carbon shell, it won't work well, if outside it will, the same as in a traditional aluminum construction.  Because of windows, cracks (seams at the door), etc., there is leakage from the inside of a aluminum plane, but it will be very directional and likely to be very poor for ground communication signals.  My two cents worth.  (A further sidebar.  Since carbon fiber it is a measurable 5 ohms, it will not shield as well as aluminum, therefore there will be significant leakage in comparison to aluminum   I.e. up close it might appear that you can transmit/receive from antennas inside, but I would estimate that the attenuation is on the order of 20 dB or more.)
Charles Patton


Paul Lipps wrote:
Jim Cameron,
    Putting the antenna on the outside of a carbon plane is almost as bad as putting it on the inside. Being a carbon conductor (think resistor), it will absorb most of the power put into the antenna, especially if its impedance appears similar to free-space impedance.

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