Since folded unipoles are most often used for refurbishing old broadcast antennas, the first subsection below describes a typical monopole antenna used as a starting point. The subsection that follows next describes how surrounding skirt wires are added to convert an ordinary broadcast tower into a folded unipole. The picture at the right shows a small folded unipole antenna constructed from an existing triangular monopole tower; it has only three vertical wires comprising its "skirt".
Conventional monopole antennas A typical monopole transmitting antenna for an AM
radio station is a series-fed
mast radiator; a vertical steel
lattice mast which is energized and radiates radio waves. One side of the
feedline which feeds power from the transmitter to the antenna is connected to the mast, the other side to a
ground (electricity) system consisting of buried wires radiating from a terminal next to the base of the mast. The mast is supported on a thick
ceramic insulator which isolates it electrically from the ground.
US FCC regulations require the ground system to have 120 buried copper or phosphor bronze radial wires at least one-quarter wavelength long; there is usually a ground-screen in the immediate vicinity of the tower. To minimize corrosion, all the ground system components are bonded together, usually by using
brazing or
soldered with
coin silver. The mast has diagonal
guy cables attached to it, anchored to concrete anchors in the ground, to support it. The guy lines have
strain insulators in them to isolate them electrically from the mast, to prevent the high voltage from reaching the ground. To prevent the conductive guy lines from disturbing the radiation pattern of the antenna, additional strain insulators are sometimes inserted in the lines to divide them into a series of short, electrically separate segments, to ensure all segments are too short to resonate at the operating frequency. In the U.S., the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requires that the transmitter power measurements for a single series-fed tower calculated at this feed point as the current squared multiplied by the resistive part of the feed-point impedance. ::\ P = I^2\ R\
Electrically short monopole antennas have low resistance and high capacitive (negative) reactance. Depending on desired recipients and the surrounding terrain, and particularly depending on locations of spacious expanses of open water, a longer antenna may tend to send signals out in directions that are increasingly more advantageous, up to the point that the antenna's electrical height exceeds about tall. Reactance is zero only for towers slightly shorter than but the reactance will in any case rise or fall depending on humidity, dust, salty spume, or ice collecting on the tower or its feedline. Regardless of its height, the antenna feed system has an
impedance matching system housed in a
small shed at the tower's base (called a "
tuning hut" or "coupling hut" or "helix hut"). The
matching network is adjusted to join the antenna's
impedance to the
characteristic impedance of the
feedline joining it to the transmitter. If the tower is too short (or too tall) for the frequency, the antenna's capacitive (or inductive)
reactance will be cancelled out with the opposite reactance by the
matching network, as well as raising or lowering the feedpoint resistance of the antenna to match the feedline's
characteristic impedance. The combined limitations of the
matching network,
ground wires, and tower can cause the system to have a narrow
bandwidth; in extreme cases the effects of narrow bandwidth can be severe enough to detract from the audio fidelity of the radio broadcast. Electrically short antennas have low
radiation resistance, which makes normal loss in other parts of the system relatively more costly in terms of lost broadcast power. The losses in the ground system, matching network(s), feedline wires, and structure of the tower all are in series with the antenna feed current, and each wastes a share of the broadcast power heating the soil or metal in the tower.
Folded unipole antennas Heuristically, the unipole's outer skirt wires can be thought of as attached segments of several tall, narrow, single-turn
coils, all wired in parallel, with the central mast completing the final side of each turn. Equivalently, each skirt wire makes a
parallel wire stub, with the mast being the other
parallel "wire"; the
closed end at the top of the stub, where the skirt connects to the mast, makes a
transmission line stub
inductor. Either way of looking at it, the effect of the skirt wires is to add inductive
reactance to the antenna mast, which helps neutralize a short mast's capacitive reactance. For the normal case of a short monopole, the inductive
reactance introduced by the skirt wires decreases as the frequency decreases and the bare mast's capacitive reactance increases. With increasing frequency, up to frequency where the skirt is a quarter wavelength, the inductive reactance rises and capacitive reactance drops. So for a short antenna, the skirt's inductance and the mast's capacitance can only cancel at a single frequency, since the reactance magnitudes increase and decrease in opposite manner with frequency. With a longer antenna mast, at least a quarter-wave tall, the reactances can be more elaborately configured: The contrary
reactances can be made to cancel each other at more than one frequency, at least in part, and to rise and fall by approximately the same amount. Approximate balance between the opposing reactances adds up to reduce the total reactance of the whole antenna at the decreased (and increased) frequencies, thus widening the antenna's low-reactance bandwidth. However, there is nothing particularly remarkable about a longer antenna having a wider low-reactance bandwidth. If the greater part of the
unbalanced radio current can be made to flow in the skirt wires, instead of in the mast, the outer ring of skirt wires will also effectively add electrical width to the mast, which also will improve bandwidth by causing the unbalanced currents in the unipole to function like a "
cage antenna". Usually folded-unipoles are constructed by modifying an existing monopole antenna, and not all possible unipole improvements can be achieved on every monopole. • First one connects the base of the tower directly to the ground system by shorting out the base insulator (if any). • Then a series of vertical wires – typically four to eight – are installed from an attachment at or near the top of the tower; these wires surround the tower and are called a "skirt". • The skirt wires are kept a constant distance from the tower by insulated "stand-off" structural members, and joined to an electrically isolated conductor ring that surrounds the base of the tower, also mounted on insulated stand-offs. • The new antenna feed connects between the common point of the ground system and the ring at the bottom of the skirt wires. The resulting skirt enveloping the mast connects only at the tower top, or some midpoint near the top, and to the isolated conducting ring that surrounds the tower base; the skirt wires remain insulated from the mast at every other point along its entire length. == Unipole electrical operation and design ==