Question about counterpoise

OkieBoyKJ5JFG

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I've noticed when testing antennas on my truck, if I touch the radiating element, SWR usually improves, sometimes quite a bit. I assume my body is acting as a counterpoise. Why doesn't the same thing happen when I run a wire from the antenna to a grounding screw on the truck?
 

mmckenna

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I've noticed when testing antennas on my truck, if I touch the radiating element, SWR usually improves, sometimes quite a bit. I assume my body is acting as a counterpoise. Why doesn't the same thing happen when I run a wire from the antenna to a grounding screw on the truck?

It's not a counterpoise, your body is coupling with the radiating element and becoming part of it, changing the resonance.

A counterpoise can be a substitute for an earth ground. Depending on the antenna type, it'll be looking for a flat plane under the antenna base.
Simply running a wire from the base of the antenna to some random ground point doesn't satisfy that need. It might provide a DC ground, but not a good RF ground/counterpoise/ground plane.
 

OkieBoyKJ5JFG

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It's not a counterpoise, your body is coupling with the radiating element and becoming part of it, changing the resonance.

A counterpoise can be a substitute for an earth ground. Depending on the antenna type, it'll be looking for a flat plane under the antenna base.
Simply running a wire from the base of the antenna to some random ground point doesn't satisfy that need. It might provide a DC ground, but not a good RF ground/counterpoise/ground plane.
That's interesting. So far, I've never seen it make the SWR worse, or if it did, I didn't notice it. I would think changing the resonance would make it worse about as often as it makes it better.
 
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