After the initial interest check we decide to make a short batch of antennas for all pre-orders and if the interest will grow up we can now produce the large quantities in a short time. The test of the final design showed expected performance and we are happy to offer the ADS-B antenna with the characteristics mentioned earlier on this page.
When you buy the antenna, you will get non assembled antenna as on the picture bellow. No extra coaxial cable nor connector, no mounting bracket, just the PCB antenna (one peace FR-4 laminate). To assemble the antenna you will need not more than 5 minutes using the soldering iron and a pair of side cutters. This is the top side of the antenna (logo side).
ASSEMBLING
STEP 1.
Start assembling by snapping the board on two (yellow line). For a clean cut use the side cutters. Now you have two parts, the vertical monopole (smaller one) and the ground plane with the matching to 50 ohm cable on the bottom side of the PCB.
STEP 2.
In this step you need to solder prepared coaxial cable to the antenna (bottom side). I prefer to use the Teflon cable as it can be handed easily and it is temperature resistive and it will not melt during the soldering. Solder the coax as per lower picture, the braid should be soldered to the bigger pad (with the grounding vias) and the center wire should be soldered to the smaller pad going to the monopole through the 50 ohm matching line.
STEP 3.
When you buy the antenna, you will get non assembled antenna as on the picture bellow. No extra coaxial cable nor connector, no mounting bracket, just the PCB antenna (one peace FR-4 laminate). To assemble the antenna you will need not more than 5 minutes using the soldering iron and a pair of side cutters. This is the top side of the antenna (logo side).
ASSEMBLING
STEP 1.
Start assembling by snapping the board on two (yellow line). For a clean cut use the side cutters. Now you have two parts, the vertical monopole (smaller one) and the ground plane with the matching to 50 ohm cable on the bottom side of the PCB.
STEP 2.
In this step you need to solder prepared coaxial cable to the antenna (bottom side). I prefer to use the Teflon cable as it can be handed easily and it is temperature resistive and it will not melt during the soldering. Solder the coax as per lower picture, the braid should be soldered to the bigger pad (with the grounding vias) and the center wire should be soldered to the smaller pad going to the monopole through the 50 ohm matching line.
STEP 3.
Insert the vertical monopole (smaller PCB) from the top side (logo side) into the milled holes as on the picture bellow. The PCB will fit tight. Ensure that the monopole is vertical against the ground PCB. The shorter leg should be soldered to the top side (ground side).
STEP 4.
Turn the antenna up side down and solder the longer leg of the vertical monopole to the matching pad. With the step 4 antenna is ready for the operation. To have more mechanical strength between the monopole and the ground plane you can apply some epoxy from the top side all around the vertical monopole but even without it the monopole will be hard to brake from the antenna.
Many questions received how to attach the antenna to the mast or how to use the antenna desktop. If you want to use the antenna desktop, it is handy to attach the self adhesive pads to the all 4 corners of the antenna. This way the antenna will be a couple of millimeters from the desk and the longer vertical monopole leg and the coax braid will not scratch you desk surface. At the same time, if you use the rubber pads as i do, the antenna will not slip off the desk by accidental pulling the antenna cable, it will have a good grip to the desk.
For the outdoor use, it is best to use some cheap protective plastic food container. In the same container you can then house the LNA or filter and run just the cable to your receiver. Moreover, there are two marked dots on the ground plane PCB if you want to use the bracket pole mounting as i did in my prototype antenna. Just drill the required hole size and use the peace of the aluminum L profile to attach the antenna to the mast.
INTEREST CHECK
This is not just another ADS-B cut and try antenna, this is the ADS-B antenna designed by a highly skilled professional. The antenna is designed to efficiently cover the range from 1030 MHz to 1090 MHz, so the two common used channels in the ADS-B system. After the initial tests with the prototype antenna from the picture I decide to hear your voice.
What makes this antenna special and different from the other designs that we have on the market ?
Simply, this is one of a DC grounded antenna, efficiently handle the static problems that may occurs on the antenna. This antenna came out as the answer to many e-mails received where the user experience the situations where the ADS-B receivers, DVB-T dongles, low noise preamplifier's were damaged due to static coming from the antenna. There are many sources of the static, like corona discharge, rain static, wind static etc.
There are several ways how to cure the problem. The simplest one is to disconnect the antenna, but most of the users are running the receivers 24/7 or remotely positioned antennas where disconnecting the antenna is not an easy option.
Most of the users rely on the pair of the protection diodes commonly installed in the equipment they are using. This looks like a good prevention but in reality this is a double-edged sword!
This par of diodes are potential source of the intermodulation that can spoil your reception to the levels where the properly installed antenna with the professional preamplifier's may result in poor reception. This is the most common problem if you are close to the strong radio and TV broadcast transmitters, or GSM towers. Setups with the high gain antennas and preamplifier's without the good filtering will amplify already strong out of the band signals routing the same to the pair of diodes at the receiver input. This signals crate a so called ghost signals that may interfere with your frequency of the interest.
DC grounded antenna will ground also the static and your equipment will be protected. At the same time, the "protection" diodes may be removed, hence the possible cause of the intermodulation. Folded monopole antenna is an old and well known design but not so common used. You can find that antenna in some professional rugged systems where static discharge is the main problem.
The goal was to design a cheap and at the same time efficient antenna. Another very important thing was to design the antenna that may fit into envelope for the cheap shipping. The antenna should meet the 50 ohms impedance as the standard and cover both ADS-B frequencies. Assembling should be simple and straightforward not requiring special tools or user skills. It should be light and most important the antenna should work properly.
We manage to have all that including the following characteristics:
1. Omnidirectional pattern
In order to cover all sectors and directions, the 360 degrees omnidirectional pattern is preferred for the broadcast nature of ADS-B transmission. Depending on the location of the antenna the signals from the planes, their position on the map should be scattered evenly around the location without the gaps.
2. Vertical polarization
The signals from the ADS-B transponders
are vertically polarized, hence the receiving antenna should meet the same
vertical polarization in order to receive the strongest signal for the
best reception. The folded monopole antenna is vertically polarized
antenna as can be noticed from the diagram.
3. Efficiency and the gain
The efficiency of the antenna is better then 99% and the calculated gain is 1.53dB or, for the marketing guys 3.67dBi. The gain was not an imperative when this antenna was designed but it came out from the design.
4. Impedance
The antenna has the impedance of 50ohms at the resonant frequency. As the standard widely used 50 ohms is preferred over the 75 ohms due to variety coax lines, preamplifier's and filters that are designed for the same impedance. It is true that there is a large growing community using the simple DVB-T dongles designed with the 75 ohms input impedance but to keep the things simple we stick to the 50 ohms.
5. Impedance matching
4. Impedance
The antenna has the impedance of 50ohms at the resonant frequency. As the standard widely used 50 ohms is preferred over the 75 ohms due to variety coax lines, preamplifier's and filters that are designed for the same impedance. It is true that there is a large growing community using the simple DVB-T dongles designed with the 75 ohms input impedance but to keep the things simple we stick to the 50 ohms.
5. Impedance matching
The folded monopole itself has much higher impedance then required 50 ohms so the matching was required. The matching system used is made using the microstrip line on the bottom of the ground plane made of FR-4 1.6mm laminate. Good matching has achieved across the whole working frequency range. At the end of the mach there are pads where any type of 50 ohms coaxial line should be soldered.
6. Voltage Standing Wave ratio (VSWR)
The VSWR is quite flat for the frequency range of the interest. If 75 ohm coaxial line is used the VSWR will degrade due to minimal mismatch between the feeder line and the antenna impedance. This should not affect the efficiency of the antenna in large scale.
The antenna is made on FR-4 1.6mm laminate and it consist of two parts, the ground plane with the matching line and the vertical hairpin style monopole. The ground plane is 140x140mm in size, while the hairpin is 65mm high. To assemble the antenna it required only to insert the vertical hairpin into the catted slot on the ground plane and to simply solder the hairpin microstrip line to the match on one side and to the ground plane on the top side. Solder the coaxial line to the connecting pads and antenna is ready.
If used outside, it is advised to place the antenna into some plastic canister, (cheap food plastic canisters).
Such antenna should be placed on top of the metal mast in order to maintain the omnidirectional pattern.
Target price is 20 Euro. If there is enough interest, I can make the first batch in short period so it is up to you.Please leave your comments and suggestions bellow in order to valuate the project.
Thanks
I would certainly be interested in one!
ReplyDeleteNoted,
Deletethanks,
Adam
Antenna is available
DeleteI'd like one. 73 de N6MOD
ReplyDeleteAntenna is available
DeleteFor €20 its a no brainer, well worth trying. 73 John G3VUO
ReplyDeleteAntenna is available
DeleteI'm interested. Danny, Sheffield UK
ReplyDeleteAntenna is available
DeleteInterested Prefer 75ohm if you pursue it.
ReplyDeleteAntenna is available
DeleteYeah! I would like one too!
ReplyDeleteInterested.
ReplyDeleteAntenna is available
DeleteSorry, the 75 ohm version will not be available, but the impedance transformer can be always inserted in the coaxial feed line for 50 to 75 ohm match.
ReplyDeleteI'm interested. Cheers, Eddie.
ReplyDeleteAntenna is available
DeleteWhat are the mounting options for this? In other words how would it be mounted at height?
ReplyDeletehttp://radarspotting.com/forum/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=3791.0;attach=6351;image
DeleteThere will be two 3mm holes on the antenna ground plane.
The bracket from the picture will not be part of the supply but can be made simple using the Aluminum 20x20 mm L profile and a U bolt.
Antenna is available
DeleteInterested, but concerned about shipping costs to Canada (?)
ReplyDeleteHello Darren,
DeleteI expect to keep the shipping 5 Euro worldwide as we have for all our previos projects. The plan is to ship the antenna not assembled, so in 2 pcs, in the jewel case size padded envelope.
Interested !!!
ReplyDeleteHello!
ReplyDeleteI'd be interested too!
Antenna is available
DeleteWe should have the first batch of the antennas out of the factory soon, maybe even during the week. I will advice all the interested through the email or by blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks
Adam
I'm interested. Question about mounting outdoors. Leave it to oxidize or coat the copper with something? KC8AAC
ReplyDeleteHi Adam, I just ordered one.
DeleteQ: is the antenna completely whater-resistant/waterproofed? So we can mount it for 24/7 outdoors without any problems?
Is the antenna still available?
ReplyDeleteScott
Antenna available
DeleteHope there are a few left.
ReplyDeleteThanks
Steve
Do you have any left for sale?
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Yes we do have them. Drop me a mail, thanks.
ReplyDeleteAdam
How do I order your products?
ReplyDeleteSend me e-mail
DeleteAdam,
ReplyDeleteany plans on scaling this antenna for FLARM/LORAWAN (868/915MHz)?
No such idea for the moment.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot for the post.
ReplyDeleteBullion Jackpot Call
Interesting post,keep sharing...
ReplyDeleteCommodity Free Tips
If this is discontinued, can you publish the PCB design file(s)?
ReplyDeleteYour message Is a good article Can be easily understood I have interest in this field Can you read my
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