Firstly I do not take credit for the design of this antenna. That came from the great IBCray and his tutorial for the calculations, theory and measurements can be found here. So I'm not going to go over those again. This is just my build log and application of his design. So that being said lets get started.
Things you'll need.
For the antenna:
1. A small coax cable
2. Copper or steel wire, about 14 AWG
3. Metallic plate
4. Two Nylon bolts
5. Plastic container (optional as this is just the cover)
For the antenna mounting (this is just my solution but many others would work as well):
1. 12mm x 12mm square wooden dowel.
2. Two M3 bolts (atleast 30mm)
3. Heat shrink
Other:
1. Heat shrink
2. Hot glue
3. Solder
Lets get to the modding......
Step 1.
Cut the backing plate and the wire. I used G10 board for the reflector plate.
Step 2.
Start bending the wire at the section lengths for a 2.4 Ghz (see the IBCrazy thread for the calculations to get the dimensions for your frequency)
Step 3.
The reflector plate and the resonator.
Step 4.
Drill a hole in reflector for the coax cable and also mount the nylon bolts to hold the resonator.
Step 5.
Strip the coax cable back and solder the shielding to the reflector.
Step 6.
Solder the resonator to the coax cable and glue it to the nylon bolts
Step 7.
Glue the coax cable and nylon bolts to the back of the reflector and glue the plastic container to the front of the antenna.
Step 8.
You'll need to get the coax cable into the Taranis so instead of drilling into it I ran it though the hole in the ORX module left when I did the antenna mod on it.
Step 9.
New antenna connected to Taranis.
Step 10.
Solder new coax cable to the Taranis module board where the other antenna was connected.
Step 11.
Antenna ready to be mounted.
Step 12.
Cut four sections of the dowel about the length of antenna. Doesn't matter if they are a bit shorter.
Step 13.
Clamp them together and drill a hole where they meet at the top about 4mm in diameter.
Step 14.
Take the handle off the Taranis and put some heat shrink over it to give the clamp more grip.
Step 15.
Drill mounting holes in the dowels just bellow the main semi holes.
Step 16.
Screw the mounts together with the M3 bolts and clamp them to the handle of the Taranis.
Step 17.
Glue the new antenna to the mounts.
Step 18.
All Done!
Note: this reduced my SWR reading down to 16. This is probably fine but I read that to get it even lower you need to make sure that when you're soldering the coax cable to the board you want to expose a very very small amount of the core and make it as close as possible to the soldered shielding.

















No comments:
Post a Comment