Skip to content

Your cart is empty

Continue shopping

Have an account?

Log in to check out faster.

Your cart

Loading...

Estimated total

€0,00 EUR

Tax included and shipping and discounts calculated at checkout

Electronics & Antennas for Ham Radio

  • New
  • Hot
  • HotSpot
    • VHF
    • UHF
  • Repeater
    • ON0ORA
  • BalUn/UnUn
    • Balun
    • Unun
  • Isolators
    • Line Isolators
    • Surge Protection
  • Filters
    • VHF-UHF Filter
    • Line Filters
  • Antenna
    • HF Active RX Antenna
    • HF End Fed Wire Antenna
    • HF Verticals - V-Dipoles
    • HF Rigid Loops
    • HF Doublets - Inverted Vs
    • UHF Antenna
    • VHF Antenna
    • Dualband VHF-UHF
    • Grounding
    • Masts
    • Guy Ropes & Accessories
    • GPS Antenna
    • Mobile Antenna
    • Handheld Antenna
    • ISM Antenna 433/868
    • Antenna Tools
    • Anti-Corrosion Lubricants
    • Dummy Load
  • Coax
    • Coaxial Seal
    • Coax Connectors
    • Panel Mount Connectors
    • Coax Adaptors
    • Coax Tools
    • Coax Cable
    • Coax Surge protection
    • Jumper - Patch cable
  • 13.8 V
    • DC-DC
    • AC-DC
    • Powerpole
    • 13.8 V Cable
  • PA
    • VHF Power Amplifiers
    • UHF Power Amplifiers
  • Parts
    • Ferrite
    • Pi
    • Routers
  • PCB
  • SDR
  • APRS
  • KB
    • Why we started RF.Guru
    • Mission Statement
    • Product Whitepapers
    • Knowledge Base
    • Transmit Antennas
    • Baluns and Ununs
    • Receive Antennas & Arrays
    • Technical Deep Dives
    • Debunking Myths
    • Transmission lines
    • Radio Interference
    • Grounding and safety
    • Ham Radio 101
    • Calculators
    • Ham Florida Man
    • HamTubers Nonsense
    • Errata & Modern Context
    • %λΦ#@!Ω
  • ON6URE
    • on the road ...
    • collaborations ...
    • on4aow ...
    • on4pra ...
Log in

Country/region

  • Belgium EUR €
  • Germany EUR €
  • Italy EUR €
  • Sweden EUR €
  • Austria EUR €
  • Belgium EUR €
  • Bulgaria EUR €
  • Canada EUR €
  • Croatia EUR €
  • Czechia EUR €
  • Denmark EUR €
  • Estonia EUR €
  • Finland EUR €
  • France EUR €
  • Germany EUR €
  • Greece EUR €
  • Hungary EUR €
  • Ireland EUR €
  • Italy EUR €
  • Latvia EUR €
  • Lithuania EUR €
  • Luxembourg EUR €
  • Netherlands EUR €
  • Poland EUR €
  • Portugal EUR €
  • Romania EUR €
  • Slovakia EUR €
  • Slovenia EUR €
  • Spain EUR €
  • Sweden EUR €
  • Switzerland EUR €
  • United Kingdom EUR €
  • United States EUR €
  • YouTube
RF.Guru Logo
  • New
  • Hot
  • HotSpot
    • VHF
    • UHF
  • Repeater
    • ON0ORA
  • BalUn/UnUn
    • Balun
    • Unun
  • Isolators
    • Line Isolators
    • Surge Protection
  • Filters
    • VHF-UHF Filter
    • Line Filters
  • Antenna
    • HF Active RX Antenna
    • HF End Fed Wire Antenna
    • HF Verticals - V-Dipoles
    • HF Rigid Loops
    • HF Doublets - Inverted Vs
    • UHF Antenna
    • VHF Antenna
    • Dualband VHF-UHF
    • Grounding
    • Masts
    • Guy Ropes & Accessories
    • GPS Antenna
    • Mobile Antenna
    • Handheld Antenna
    • ISM Antenna 433/868
    • Antenna Tools
    • Anti-Corrosion Lubricants
    • Dummy Load
  • Coax
    • Coaxial Seal
    • Coax Connectors
    • Panel Mount Connectors
    • Coax Adaptors
    • Coax Tools
    • Coax Cable
    • Coax Surge protection
    • Jumper - Patch cable
  • 13.8 V
    • DC-DC
    • AC-DC
    • Powerpole
    • 13.8 V Cable
  • PA
    • VHF Power Amplifiers
    • UHF Power Amplifiers
  • Parts
    • Ferrite
    • Pi
    • Routers
  • PCB
  • SDR
  • APRS
  • KB
    • Why we started RF.Guru
    • Mission Statement
    • Product Whitepapers
    • Knowledge Base
    • Transmit Antennas
    • Baluns and Ununs
    • Receive Antennas & Arrays
    • Technical Deep Dives
    • Debunking Myths
    • Transmission lines
    • Radio Interference
    • Grounding and safety
    • Ham Radio 101
    • Calculators
    • Ham Florida Man
    • HamTubers Nonsense
    • Errata & Modern Context
    • %λΦ#@!Ω
  • ON6URE
    • on the road ...
    • collaborations ...
    • on4aow ...
    • on4pra ...
Log in Cart

Feeding a Resonant Dipole With 600 Ω Open‑Wire

Related reading: Antenna Impedance vs Transmission Line Impedance The Open-Wire Balanced Feedline — The Forgotten Ultra-Low-Loss Champion

— Why No Choke Is Needed, and How Line Length Really Matters

A precise, monoband-focused guide with a short contrast to the multiband “doublet”.

TL;DR

  • A center-fed resonant dipole and 600 Ω open-wire are both balanced; with symmetric geometry, feed it directly — no feedpoint choke required.
  • Za (antenna) and Z0 (line) are independent; mismatch creates SWR on the line, not extra radiation. With low-loss open-wire, efficiency stays high even with significant SWR.
  • Near-field geometry dominates: keep the first 0.1–0.2 λ of feedline orthogonal to the dipole and clear of conductive surfaces; then route as needed.
  • For monoband with no tuner, put a 1:1 current balun at the base, then short 50 Ω coax to the shack. Avoid odd ¼-wave line lengths and aim for an electrical ½-wave so the coax SWR is modest (~1.4:1 typical).

Why No Choke Is Needed at the Feedpoint

A coax-fed dipole often needs a choke because the coax shield is an unbalanced conductor and can carry stray return currents. An open-wire line is balanced: the two conductors carry equal and opposite currents so their fields cancel and the line does not radiate when the geometry is symmetric.

  • Make both dipole legs the same electrical length and height.
  • Let both conductors leave the feedpoint together, at right angles to the dipole for the first 0.1–0.2 λ.
  • Keep that early run in free air, several line spacings away from metal and wet surfaces.

Small asymmetries can still induce a little stray return current on the line. That’s why we put a 1:1 current balun at the bottom—it scrubs any residual current before the coax.

Antenna Impedance vs. Line Impedance — Two Different Things

Quantity Meaning Typical value
Antenna feedpoint impedance (Za) Electrical load at the dipole center (resonant) ~70 Ω (flat-top in free space); often 40–60 Ω for inverted-V
Feedline characteristic impedance (Z0) Ratio of V/I for a traveling wave on the line Common: ~300–500 Ω (homebrew), ~600 Ω (wide-spaced open-wire)

They don’t have to match. If Za ≠ Z0, you get SWR on the line, but with low-loss open-wire this adds only a small fraction of a dB for typical HF lengths. The energy still flows efficiently from antenna to your balun/coax.

Why Line Length Matters

Coupling & Balance (Does the Line Radiate?)

The reactive near field of a thin half-wave dipole extends to roughly ~0.2 λ. If the feedline leaves at right angles and stays clear for the first 0.1–0.2 λ, differential currents dominate and the line remains “quiet.” This is a geometry problem—not a magic cutoff length.

Impedance Transformation (What the Balun/Coax Sees)

The input impedance of a transmission line is length-dependent:

Zin = Z0 · ( ZL + j Z0 tan βℓ ) / ( Z0 + j ZL tan βℓ )

  • At ¼ λ, impedance inverts (high ↔ low).
  • At ½ λ, impedance repeats (Zin ≈ ZL).
Line length Zin at bottom 50 Ω coax SWR
0.00 λ 70 + j0 Ω 1.4 : 1
0.125 λ 138 + j 584 Ω ≈ 52 : 1
0.25 λ ≈ 5.14 kΩ (resistive) ≈ 103 : 1
0.375 λ 138 − j 584 Ω ≈ 52 : 1
0.50 λ 70 + j0 Ω 1.4 : 1

Practical takeaway: For monoband into a 1:1 balun then coax with no tuner, avoid odd ¼-wave feedline lengths and aim for an electrical ½-wave (or any integer multiple). Staying within roughly ±2 % of ½-wave typically keeps coax SWR ≤ 2:1.

Practical Build for a Lightweight Monoband Dipole

  • Antenna: Center-fed resonant dipole or inverted-V (e.g., 40 m or 20 m).
  • Feedline: True wide-spaced open-wire (~600 Ω) or “ladder line” (~400–500 Ω).
  • Transition: 1:1 current (Guanella) balun at ground → short 50 Ω coax to the shack.
  • Routing: Keep the first 0.1–0.2 λ orthogonal and clear of other conductors.

What Spacing Really Gives “600 Ω”?

For two round wires in air, Z0 ≈ 120·acosh(S/d), where S is spacing and d conductor diameter.

Conductor Spacing S (mm) Approx. Z0 (Ω)
#14 (~1.6 mm) ≈ 120 ≈ 600 Ω
#12 (~2.0 mm) ≈ 150 ≈ 600 Ω
#10 (~2.6 mm) ≈ 200 ≈ 600 Ω
#12 @ 25–30 mm — ≈ 385–405 Ω (typical ladder-line)

“450 Ω ladder line” often measures 400–500 Ω in practice.

How This Differs From a Multiband Doublet

Feature Resonant Monoband Dipole Multiband Doublet
Feedline Open-wire (any Z0) Open-wire (any Z0)
Matching Direct (resonant) Requires tuner
Balun placement At ground, 1:1 current At/inside tuner
Feedpoint choke Not needed Not needed
Bands Single Many
Use case Light, simple, portable Stationary, flexible

Design Cookbook (Monoband, No Tuner)

  1. Cut the dipole for resonance near band center: L[m] ≈ 143/f[MHz].
  2. Choose feedline Z0: 400–600 Ω typical.
  3. Plan open-wire length: make electrical length ≈ n·½-wave. L½[m] ≈ (150·VF)/f, VF≈0.98–0.99.
  4. At the base: 1:1 balun → short 50 Ω coax. If SWR > 2:1, trim line or touch up with ATU.
  5. Static & weather: 100 kΩ–1 MΩ bleeder across feedpoint helps with charge.

Half-Wave Open-Wire Reference Lengths (VF = 0.99)

Band Center (MHz) ½-Wave Line (m)
160 m 1.9 ≈ 78.2
80 m 3.6 ≈ 41.3
40 m 7.1 ≈ 20.9
20 m 14.2 ≈ 10.5
10 m 28.4 ≈ 5.2

Troubleshooting & Gotchas

  • RF in the shack: Ensure bottom balun ≥ 3 kΩ choking Z; add coax choke if needed.
  • High SWR: Likely near ¼-wave length. Trim toward ½-wave.
  • Rain detuning: Wet wood/leaves change Z0; keep line clear and elevated.
  • Inverted-V: Lower Za (40–60 Ω). Still fine — check your ½-wave window.
  • Ferrite heating: If operating near ¼-wave Z peaks, reduce power or adjust length.

Special Case: 160 m — Short Open-Wire Sections

Short answer: At 160 m, a 16 m line is only 0.10 λ, so you’re far from the ¼-wave points. SWR on the line stays constant; input impedance changes only slowly with length because phase rotation is small at 1.8–2 MHz.

  • SWR on the line is length-independent: SWR = (1+|ΓL|)/(1−|ΓL|).
  • Only phase changes with ℓ: Γin=ΓL·e−j2βℓ.
  • At 1.9 MHz (λ≈158 m), 16 m = 0.10 λ → rotation ~28°, far from 90° inversion.
  • Consequence: Below 0.1 λ, impedance varies slowly and efficiency remains high.
  • Contrast: On 80 m, same line = 0.2 λ (144° rotation); on 40 m = 0.4 λ (288° rotation).

Bottom line: A resonant monoband dipole fed with open-wire is simple and efficient. Keep the early section symmetric, avoid odd ¼-wave lengths, use a solid 1:1 current balun at the base—and enjoy clean, stable signals.

Mini-FAQ

  • Do I need a choke or balun at the top? — No. Balanced antenna + balanced line = quiet line. Place the 1:1 current balun at the bottom.
  • My line is 450 Ω. Does it still work? — Yes. Same principles; avoid ¼-wave, aim for ½-wave.
  • Can I run without any tuner? — Yes, if your open-wire is near a ½-wave electrically (SWR ≤ 2:1).
  • How close to ½-wave do I need? — ±2 % → SWR ≤ 2:1; ±3 % → ≤ 3:1.

Interested in more technical content? Subscribe to our updates for deep-dive RF articles and lab notes.

Questions or experiences to share? Contact RF.Guru.

Written by Joeri Van Dooren, ON6URE — RF engineer, antenna designer, and founder of RF.Guru, specializing in high-performance HF/VHF antennas and RF components.

Subscribe here to receive updates on our latest product launches

  • YouTube
Payment methods
  • Bancontact
  • iDEAL
  • Maestro
  • Mastercard
  • PayPal
  • Visa
© 2025, RF Guru Powered by Shopify
  • Refund policy
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of service
  • Contact information
  • News
  • Guru's Lab
  • Press
  • DXpeditions
  • Fairs & Exhibitions
  • Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
  • Opens in a new window.
Purchase options
Select a purchase option to pre order this product
Countdown header
Countdown message


DAYS
:
HRS
:
MINS
:
SECS