Ka-KoolKid said:
Ok long story short, I couldn't start a thread so I made a second account and it just got banned so I'm back to my original account. I attached a screen shot of my results. To be honest I'm not sure how to interpret any of it. I chose 900Mhz because that was in the tutorial. I had to specify frequency and height and radius of the antenna wire/rod but I was under the impression that I could pick a height radius and receive information regarding what the resonant frequency of the rod would be.
You can tell a bit about that antenna from the information given.
That diagram shows a slice of the antenna radiation pattern and since the antenna is symmetrical about the vertical axis, you can mentally rotate it to get something like the top half of a donut.
This tells you the antenna works by radiating most of its power horizontally or up at low angles, but it radiates very little straight up.
The input impedance is 179 - j341. For resonance, the j number should be zero.
In this case, the antenna is being operated below its resonant frequency. You can tell this by the negative sign.
So, either the antenna should be longer or the frequency should be higher.
You can calculate the resonant frequency of this type of antenna with the formula:
Length (in feet) = 234 / Frequency.
So a 900 MHz quarter wave antenna should have a length of 234 / 900 or 0.26 feet or 3.12 inches.
A dipole is about a half wavelength long. A wavelength at 900 MHz is 300 / 900 or 0.333 meters long so a half wavelength is half of this, or 0.166 meters or 6.56 inches.
The "300" in the above formula comes from the speed of light.
A formula for half wave dipole is Length (in feet) = 492 / frequency in MHz
So a dipole at 900 MHz would be 492 /900 = 0.546 feet long or 6.56 inches long.
I find the program EZNEC free Demo version 5 easier to use since all the information is in one program.
You can get this program from
www.eznec.com.