US3818488A - Shipboard yardarm half-wave antenna - Google Patents
Shipboard yardarm half-wave antenna Download PDFInfo
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- US3818488A US3818488A US00324607A US32460773A US3818488A US 3818488 A US3818488 A US 3818488A US 00324607 A US00324607 A US 00324607A US 32460773 A US32460773 A US 32460773A US 3818488 A US3818488 A US 3818488A
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01Q—ANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
- H01Q9/00—Electrically-short antennas having dimensions not more than twice the operating wavelength and consisting of conductive active radiating elements
- H01Q9/04—Resonant antennas
- H01Q9/06—Details
- H01Q9/14—Length of element or elements adjustable
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01Q—ANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
- H01Q1/00—Details of, or arrangements associated with, antennas
- H01Q1/27—Adaptation for use in or on movable bodies
- H01Q1/34—Adaptation for use in or on ships, submarines, buoys or torpedoes
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- This invention relates to antennas and more particularly to a tunable dipole antenna arrangement having an effective electrical length which may be adjusted to equal desired fractions of wavelengths over a relatively broad band of frequencies.
- One means for enhancing efficiency is to increase the electrical length of a radiator by reducing the phase velocity on it. This can be achieved by using a resonant helix in the normal mode as the radiating element, which results in a higher radiation impedance, the elimination of an external tuner, and the operation of transmission lines with low standing wave ratios. Since the helix is an inductor, it is possible to tap a feed line into it s few turns from the lowest turn and match impedances without using additional circuits.
- a helical radiator permits the use of a shorter length than that necessary for a large and unwieldy whip antenna for example.
- Such helical antennas are quite short enough to permit enclosure within a radome of a submarine, which radome also provides physical support and can be fully retracted into the subs sail.
- the enclosed radiator is basically composed of a helix and a cylinder thereabove arranged in such a manner as to permit the combination to be electrically tuned to specific frequencies. Tuning is accomplished through varying the effective inductance of the helix in relation to the capacitance of the cylinder by shorting out or electrically eliminating helix turns. Power is fed to the antenna through a tap discretely located so as to produce a desired impedance characteristic of say 50 ohms. With the additional use of a grounding switch, the antenna can be tuned over for example a desired frequency range of 2 to 30 MHz with standing wave ratios of below 3 to l.
- the desired tuning characteristics may therefore be had by remotely selecting the proper position of the shorting element and the proper setting for the grounding switch.
- the shorting element is driven to a select position by an electric motor and held there; a position that corresponds to the desired operating frequency but-is determined for example by a precalibrated digital read-out on the front panel of a control unit.
- the invention achieves the above objective by electrically and physically combining two of the abovementioned prior art arrangements, significantly modified, end-to-end, in a vertical orientation, thus removing the need for a ground plane, as the inventive antenna arrangement is thus fully capable of Vz-wave dipole operation mountable from a yardarm of the ships mast.
- Each radiator includes a like-wound helix arranged to have its longitudinal dimension along the principal axis and its one end proximate the common drive means, and a cylindrical capacitive portionalso arranged with its longitudinal dimension along the principal axis and having one end thereof proximate the associated helix.
- Shorting means of predetermined length are arranged to be movable inside each cylinder and helix pair and to be in continual contact therewith, for
- a feature of this invention is that with the two legs or halves now employed in a dipole arrangement, twice as much power as heretofore realizable in the referenced prior art may be employed.
- Another feature of the invention is the accuracy of the tuning; the tuning resettability being so accurate, in fact, that once the system has been calibrated it is unnecessary to apply RF power to resonate the antenna for tuning purposes.
- the arrangement may be preset to a desired frequency of operation.
- FIG. 1A is a schematic illustration of the prior art helix/cylinder type arrangement similar to the embodiments disclosed in the abovereferenced U.S. patent;
- FIG. 1B is a chart of the current/voltage distribution along the antenna arrangement of FIG. 1A;
- FIG. 2A is a schematic illustration of end-to-end helix/cylinder type antennas arranged in a /2-wave dipole configuration according to the invention
- FIG. 2B is a graph of the current/voltage distribution of the antenna arrangement of FIG. 2A, superimposed over the graphical distribution performance of the arrangement of FIG. 1A;
- FIG. 3 is an enlarged schematic diagram of the arrangement of FIG. 2A giving additional detail.
- FIG. 4 is an enlarged partial sectional view of a preferred configuration of the spline drive/shorting tube portion of the antenna arrangement according to the invention.
- the antenna arrangement according to the invention is an omnidirectional k-wave dipole, having an intended power rating of up to I KW, and an intended frequency range of 2-30 MHz, with a VSWR rating of less than 3:1.
- the arrangement comprises end-to-end modified helix/cylinder type antennas similar to that described in the referenced U.S. patent, and that shown in the prior art illustration of FIG. 1A.
- the radiator according to FIG. 1A essentially comprises a conductive helix 1 and a conductive cylinder 2 arranged so as to permit this combination to be electrically tuned to specific frequencies. Tuning is accomplished through varying the effective inductance of the helix in relation to the capacitance of the cylinder by shorting out or electrically eliminating helix turns by way of a movable shorting bar 4- of fixed length. Power is fed to the antenna through a tap 5 discretely positioned or adjusted so as to produce the desired matching impedance with the transmission line 6. Through the additional use of a grounding switch 7, the antenna can be tuned, for example, over a frequency range of 2 to 30 MHz with standing wave ratios below 3 to I. As illustrated, the lower portion of the arrangement in FIG. IA is housed, for example, in the mast 8 of a submarine.
- the desired tuning characteristics are thus derived by selecting the proper position of the shorting' element 4 by remote control means, and the proper setting of the grounding switch 7. More specifically, the shorting element 4 is driven or moved to a select position by a controlled electric motor (not shown), and held there. This position corresponds to the desired operating frequency and will have been determined for instance by a precalibrated digital readout on the front panel of a control unit (also not shown).
- FIG. 13 represents the current/voltage distribution along the radiator arrangement ofFIG. 1A.
- the abscissa represents magnitude and the ordinate the actual longitudinal displacement along the FIG. 1A ra diator. It is to be noted that the highest voltages are present at the cylindrical portion 2 of the antenna and the highest currents at the impedance matching tap point 5 on the helix 1. Also the current and voltage reach practically a steady-state situation along the greater length of the cylindrical portion 2 of the antenna.
- a suitable antenna can be configured to operate in a id-and %-W3Ve mode both for transmitting and receiving.
- this configuration especially if it is sized to handle higher power for transmission, lends itself only to deck mounting in shipboard use.
- this circuitry were expanded to comprise the equivended of two antennas mounted inversely end-to'end, it would become ground independent and could therefore become a yardarm-mounted antenna rather than a deck-mounted antenna.
- FIG. 2A Such an arrangement is illustrated in FIG. 2A, with its corresponding current/voltage distribution graph given in FIG. 2B.
- FIG. 3 the illustrated configuration in FIG. 2A is depicted in a vertical orientation.
- Two helix/cylinder type antennas It) and 20 are arranged end-to-end and physically separated by a common drive means 30 for providing synchronous tuning of the poles to the desired operating frequency.
- the arrangmeent is structurally oriented parallel to a ships mast (not shown), in being suspended at 32 from a yardarm 31 of that mast, by way of the housing or casing of the common drive means 30.
- the signal input to the antenna arrangement is at 33, shown as a coaxial input.
- FIG. 28 illustrates the current/voltage distribution of each leg or half of the antenna arrangement of FIG. 2A.
- the solid lines depict respectively the IN distribution along the end-to-end inversely arranged radiators, while the dot-dashed lines depict, by comparison, the IN distribution of the lone radiator of FIG. 1A.
- FIG. 2B To be particularly noted in the upper portion of FIG. 2B is the fact that for the same power applied to both antenna arrangements (FIG. 1A and FIG. 2A), the maximum magnitudes of I and E in one leg of the FIG. 2A arrangement are roughly half that of the FIG. 1A arrangement, while the latter also has associated therewith steeper l and E slopes or gradients, thus illustrating the greater electrical stress on the single helix/cylinder arrangement.
- the individual antenna elements may become lighter in construction since the power will now be equally shared over two symmetrical configurations and components will operate under generally less electrical stress for the antennas equivalent power rating.
- One common tuning drive housed within the mounting case, mechanically synchronizes both poles to the required operating frequency.
- a high powered antenna presents a radiation hazard to personnel, it is highly desirable to remove it from deck level to a remote location. Moreover, the removal of the antenna/tuner combination from the deck to upper mast and superstructure level is also highly desirable since deck space is always at a premium.
- the proposed inventive /z-wave dipole offers the capability for such yardarm installation for both receiving and transmitting antenna considerations.
- FIG. 3 illustrates again the end-to-end arrangement of two helix/ cylinder type antennas, indicated generally as and 20, intercoupled by common drive means 30 arranged therebetween, indicated generally at 30.
- RF coaxial input (or output) 33 couples signal energy, through the wall of the antenna mount and casing 38 to a common feed point 39 by way of center conductor 33a, at which common feed point the power is essentially equally divided to be fed to tap feed points 15, 25 of the respective helix/cylinder antennas 10, 20. While not particularly shown other than schematically by way of an arrow, the tap points 15, 25 are adjustable up and down the respective helices 1 1, 21, in order to establish the best possible impedance match with the input 33. It is intended that RF transmission line 33 run along the yardarm 31.
- taps and 25 are adjustably controlled by a common means, either automatically by remote-control switching or otherwise; and that with the adjustment of one there is provided a simultaneous and equal adjustment of the other. It is well within the scope of this invention, however, that the individual setting of taps 15 and 25 may be by hand and separate. Moreover, provision may be made in conjunction with the discretely-stepped adjustment of switching taps to finely control the impedance match in vernier fashion with the continuous adjustment caused by the motordriven insertiona and withdrawl of a dielectric tuning slug 9 within the helix turns below the input tap, as shown in FIG. 1A. With the inclusion of the tuning slug element 9, an improvement in VSWR has been experienced in the order of 2:1.
- the antenna mount and casing 38 of the common drive means 30 arranged between the radiating halves of the antenna arrangement.
- This casing 38 houses a remotely controllable drive motor 34 which reversibly drives a common drive gear 35, which is mounted to the shaft 34a of motor 34 by way of gear backing 35a.
- Common drive gear 35 meshes with identical bevel gears 36 and 37 arranged to be at right angles with common gear 35 as shown, and to be driven in the respective directions illustrated by arrows 36b, 37b responsive to a rotation of the common gear 35 indicated by arrow 35b under the control of motor 34.
- Both bevel gears 36, 37 have backings 36a, 37a by way of which they are mountable to respective dielectric drive shafts 16 and 26. From the indicated rotation of bevel gears 36 and 37, dielectric drive shafts l6 and 26 respectively turn in the direction indicated by arrows 16a and 17a. Such a rotation of shafts 16 and 26 is intended to cause an outward movement (away from the common drive means) of shorting tubes 14, 24 respectively arranged about dielectric shafts 16, 26 and coupled thereto at least at one end by way of drive splines 17, 27.
- FIG. 4 also shows the spline drive shaft 16, 26 as having a triangular example cross-section, indicated at 44.
- the arrangement of course causes the shorting tube 14, 24 and brush and guide hub 40 to rotate via this rotating shaft.
- At each end of the shorting tubes 14, 24 is a shorting brush 14a, 14b and 24a, 24b.
- the drive spline associative to each shorting tube may be part of one of the shorting brushes.
- the two shorting brushes at each end of the shorting tubes are continuously in contact with the conductive and capacitive elements respectively of the associated helix/cylinder antenna, i.e., the shorting brush 24a of shorting tube 24 is, for example, in continual internal contact with the turns of the helix 21 of antenna portion 20, while the shorting brush 24b at the other end of tube 24 is continually in contact with the interior of the capacitive portion or cylinder 22, the counterpart of which in antenna 10 is cylinder 12.
- helices ll, 21 and capacitive portions 12, 22 are substantailly circular in cross-section and constant in profile, the faces of brushes 14a, 14b and 24a, 24b would readily be formed to provide intimate contact with their associated contact surfaces.
- helices ll, 21 may be either left or right hand wound, but they are both to be wound the same way.
- the helices ll, 21 are entirely arranged in respective dielectric radome sections 13, 23 with the cylinder capacitive portions 12-22 being arranged at the end of these dielectric radome portions 13-23. Provision may also be made for further capacitance associative to portions 12 and 22 by way of the addition of supplementary capacitive pieces 18, 28, which take the form of discs or spherical segments (not shown) mounted to the freeend of each cylinder 12, 22 in such a way as to form a corona cap capable of preventing electrical discharge from the capacitive member to space.
- the two helices 11 and 21 and the two cylinders 12 and 22 should be constructed as nearly alike as possible.
- helices 11 and 21 should be of common material and have the same number of turns, the same turn pitch throughout, mounted on common insulating material, and be arranged the same distance from the center of the common drive means 30. Achievement, however, of near-ideal configuration is not a matter of considerable difficulty in the present state of the art.
- cylinders 12 and 22 should be of common material and have substantially the same physical dimensions and position, yielding closely similar capacitances for a particular setting of shorting tubes 14, 24.
- Two frequency adjustable helix/cylinder type antennas have been arranged inversely end-to-end to provide a %-wave dipole antenna arrangement that is entirely ground plane independent.
- the end-to-end sections are arranged on a principal axis about a common drive means which, while providing the main structural support of the antenna arrangement, provides common drive synchronous equal tuning of both legs of the antenna arrangement.
- a /2wave dipole antenna arrangement comprising a frequency-adjustable helix/cylinder type antennas arranged end-to-end inversely along a principal axis, and means arranged between said helix/cylinder radiators for providing simultaneous synchronous tuning thereof to the same desired resonant frequency of operation from a common drive source; and wherein each said helix/cylinder radiator includes a like-wound helix arranged to have its longitudinal dimension along said principal axis and one end thereof proximate said com mon drive means, a cylindrical capacitive portion also arranged with its longitudinal dimension along said principal axis and having one end thereof proximate the other end of the associated heiix, and shorting means of predetermined length arranged to be movable inside the associated cylindrical capacitive portion and helix and to be in continual contact therwith, for changing the resonant frequency of operation in accordance with a corresponding change in position of said shorting means along said principal axis.
- said common drive means further includes an antenna mount and casing assembly to which are mounted the end-to-end inversely arranged helix/cylinder radiators.
- said common drive means further includes, in side said mount and casing assembly, a remotely controllable motor controlling a common drive gear by way of the drive shaft of the former, said common drive gear being in mesh arrangement with a pair of bevel gears arranged to be facing each other and positioned at right angles to said common drive gear, the combined drive motor and gear arrangement providing simultaneous synchronous adjustment of the resonant frequency of each radiator.
- the antenna arrangement according to claim 4 further comprising a radome portion surrounding the helix of each radiating half of the antenna arrangement, which randome portions each communicate at one end thereof with the mount and easing assembly of said common drive means.
- each said shorting means comprises a metallic shorting tube of substantially right cylindrical shape and having at each end a coaxially mounted discshaped shorting brush extension for providing said continual contact respectively with said cylindrical capacitive portion and said helix associated therewith.
- RF signal energy is coupled between the antenna arrangement and an RF transmission line by way of a coaxial connection mounted through a side of the antenna mount and casing assembly of said common drive means, said coaxial connection being electrically coupled to a common feed point whereat the signal energy divides to be fed to each radiating half of the antenna arrangement.
- the antenna arrangement according to claim 13 further including a dielectric slug tuning means, movably arranged to be inserted in the axially direction into the end of the helix portion of each said helix/cylinder radiator nearest said common tuning means, for finely controlling impedance match of the antenna arrangement in vemier fashion through continuous adjustment capability.
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Abstract
Two frequency-adjustable antennas of the type having a helix and cylinder coaxially arranged end-to-end are themselves arranged inversely end-to-end in a 1/2 -wave dipole antenna arrangement that is entirely ground plane independent. The end-to-end radiators are arranged about a common drive means which, while providing the main structural support of the antenna arrangement, provides simultaneous synchronous tuning of each leg of the antenna arrangement.
Description
United States Patent 1191 Majkrzak et al.
[ June 18, 1974 SHIPBOARD YARDARM HALF-WAVE 3,623,! 13 11/1971 Faigen 1. 343/823 ANTENNA [75] Inventors: Charles P. Majkrzak, Nutley; P
rtmary Exammer-El1 Lieberman Pulsar Oceanport both Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Menotti J. Lombardi, Jr.; 0 John T. OHalloran [73] Assignee: lntemational Telephone and Telegraph Corporation, Nuttley, NJ. 22 Filed: Jan. 18, 1973 [571 ABSTRACT [21} Appl' 324607 Two frequency-adjustable antennas of the type having a helix and cylinder coaxially arranged end-to-end are [52] US. Cl 343/709, 343/792, 343/822, hemselves arranged inversely end-to-end in a e-wave 343/823, 343/885,,343/895 dipole antenna arrangement that is entirely ground [51] Int. Cl. H0lq 9/16 plane independent. The end-to-end radiators are ar- [58] Field of Search 343/823, 895, 709, 792, ranged about a Common drive means which, While 343/822, 885 providing the main structural support of the antenna arrangement, provides simultaneous synchronous tun- [56] References Cited ing of each leg of the antenna arrangement.
UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,91 1,234 5/1933 Meyer 343/823 13 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures 1 1 .t a: e
[6a I4Q A/vre/wvA MOUNT 15 AND CASING 38 YARD ARM 5/ 36a 56/30 1 Rf. m or 0R our ar 59 eta/v5 MOTOR 34' 2611 TAP #550 Ponvr 25 o/aecm/c DRIVE SHAFTQG /-HE1./X 2/ DR/Vi SP/NE 27 SHOR 7'/NC T085 34 CAPACITOR (c YL/NOA'R) 22 SHORT/1V6 anus/1 24b SUPPtEMEA/TAQ Y CAPACITANCE AND CORONA CAP 28 PAIENTED JUNI 81974 SHEET 2 OF 2 c-lk'xj ANTENNA Mou/vr AND cAs/lvq 38 TAP FEED Po/Nr 85 w m 0 O R 0 w P w A R 3 3 0 u 3 0. n 6 a 6 3 3 pm a ,m ,m 3 3 H I (E 3 M R A w m DRIVE MOTOR 3 HELIX 2/ OIELEC TR/C DR E SHAFT 86 RAOOME 23 SHORT/NC BRUSH 24a.
.SI/OR r/Nc ruse 24 CAPACITOR (c Y4 mos/a) 22 DR/ VE SP/NE a 7 SHIPBOARD YARDARM HALF-WAVE ANTENNA BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to antennas and more particularly to a tunable dipole antenna arrangement having an effective electrical length which may be adjusted to equal desired fractions of wavelengths over a relatively broad band of frequencies.
A related prior art disclosure may be found in US Pat. No. 2,875,433, issued to A. G. Kandoian, Feb. 24, 1959, the subject matter of which, insofar as it is relevant and material to the instant disclosure, is incorporated herein by reference. This prior art' antenna arrangement, which may now be identified in the art as a helix/cylinder combination, is an MF/HF antenna optimized for submarine use. Several different versions have been developed. The basic design approach, however, presents the fundamental advantages of high efficiency, reliability and power handling capability. This is a physically short antenna wherein all tuning and matching is accomplished within itself and within a protective radome.
One means for enhancing efficiency is to increase the electrical length of a radiator by reducing the phase velocity on it. This can be achieved by using a resonant helix in the normal mode as the radiating element, which results in a higher radiation impedance, the elimination of an external tuner, and the operation of transmission lines with low standing wave ratios. Since the helix is an inductor, it is possible to tap a feed line into it s few turns from the lowest turn and match impedances without using additional circuits.
For a given efficiency, a helical radiator permits the use of a shorter length than that necessary for a large and unwieldy whip antenna for example. Such helical antennas are quite short enough to permit enclosure within a radome of a submarine, which radome also provides physical support and can be fully retracted into the subs sail. These features, together with the low loading moments resulting from a short radiator, provide a significant improvement in shipboard reliability. Moreover, it may be readily used as a receiving antenna.
The enclosed radiator is basically composed of a helix and a cylinder thereabove arranged in such a manner as to permit the combination to be electrically tuned to specific frequencies. Tuning is accomplished through varying the effective inductance of the helix in relation to the capacitance of the cylinder by shorting out or electrically eliminating helix turns. Power is fed to the antenna through a tap discretely located so as to produce a desired impedance characteristic of say 50 ohms. With the additional use of a grounding switch, the antenna can be tuned over for example a desired frequency range of 2 to 30 MHz with standing wave ratios of below 3 to l.
The desired tuning characteristics may therefore be had by remotely selecting the proper position of the shorting element and the proper setting for the grounding switch. The shorting element is driven to a select position by an electric motor and held there; a position that corresponds to the desired operating frequency but-is determined for example by a precalibrated digital read-out on the front panel of a control unit.
In surface vessel use, the actual efficiency depends significantly upon the height of the antenna above the deck of the ship. There exist definite problems having the antenna mountedon the deck of the ship in order to achieve a ground plane, the problems including hazardous high voltages and radiation being located within easy reach of personnel, and the fact that valuable deck space is required. Moreover, deck gear and ships structure also interfere with the antenna radiation and give largely unpredictable results.
There has been a long felt need to remove antennas of this type, i.e., with the electrical, and other advantages above-mentioned, from the deck and mount them for example from a yardarm off the ships mast and out harms way without sacrificing any of the physical or electrical advantages. Until the instant invention, no successful means or arrangement had been found to accomplish this, even though it has been a recognized military problem for over a decade.
The invention achieves the above objective by electrically and physically combining two of the abovementioned prior art arrangements, significantly modified, end-to-end, in a vertical orientation, thus removing the need for a ground plane, as the inventive antenna arrangement is thus fully capable of Vz-wave dipole operation mountable from a yardarm of the ships mast.
However, the long-recognized problem alluded to above was not solved merely by the end-to-end mounting of these antennas physically and electrically. In the contemplated type of antenna structure, i.e., helix/cylinder combination, it will be appreciated, in view of the prior art above-referenced, that there is an intercoupling member of predetermined length in electrical degrees relative to the intended frequencies of operation, which member is movable to change the operating resonant frequency of the above-referenced antenna by moving the, taps on the inductive (helical) part and the capacitive (cylindrical) part in fixed relationship.
Thus, means are required to enable equal simultaneous tuning of both halves of the end-to-end arrangement according to the invention in order that there will be always the same frequency of operation from both halves. This, of course, requires closely identical construction of the two halves or legs of the dipole and'also accurate synchronous tuning. The most efficient and dependable synchronous tuning would be a single drive source operating on a common drive mechanism which synchronously tunes both halves simultaneously through exactly the same displacement.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION It is therefore an object of this invention to provide an antenna arrangement having substantially allthe ad-- vantages of the above-mentioned helix/cylinder-combh nation antenna, and that is independent of ground plane considerations and may, therefore, be mounted from a yardarm of a mast of a surface vessel, thus'eliminating the drawbacks of deck-mounted antenna arrangements.
It is another object of this invention to provide end-- to-end helix/cylinder type antennas electrically and cylinder type antennas arranged end-to-end inversely along a principal axis, and means arranged between said helix/cylinder type radiators for providing simultaneous synchronous tuning thereof to the same desired resonant frequency of operation from a common drive source.
Each radiator includes a like-wound helix arranged to have its longitudinal dimension along the principal axis and its one end proximate the common drive means, and a cylindrical capacitive portionalso arranged with its longitudinal dimension along the principal axis and having one end thereof proximate the associated helix. Shorting means of predetermined length are arranged to be movable inside each cylinder and helix pair and to be in continual contact therewith, for
' changing the resonant frequency of operation in accordance with a corresponding change in position of the shorting means along the principal axis.
A feature of this invention is that with the two legs or halves now employed in a dipole arrangement, twice as much power as heretofore realizable in the referenced prior art may be employed.
Another feature of the invention is the accuracy of the tuning; the tuning resettability being so accurate, in fact, that once the system has been calibrated it is unnecessary to apply RF power to resonate the antenna for tuning purposes. The arrangement may be preset to a desired frequency of operation.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The above-mentioned and other objects and features of this invention will become better understood with reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1A is a schematic illustration of the prior art helix/cylinder type arrangement similar to the embodiments disclosed in the abovereferenced U.S. patent;
FIG. 1B is a chart of the current/voltage distribution along the antenna arrangement of FIG. 1A;
FIG. 2A is a schematic illustration of end-to-end helix/cylinder type antennas arranged in a /2-wave dipole configuration according to the invention;
FIG. 2B is a graph of the current/voltage distribution of the antenna arrangement of FIG. 2A, superimposed over the graphical distribution performance of the arrangement of FIG. 1A;
FIG. 3 is an enlarged schematic diagram of the arrangement of FIG. 2A giving additional detail; and
FIG. 4 is an enlarged partial sectional view of a preferred configuration of the spline drive/shorting tube portion of the antenna arrangement according to the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT The antenna arrangement according to the invention is an omnidirectional k-wave dipole, having an intended power rating of up to I KW, and an intended frequency range of 2-30 MHz, with a VSWR rating of less than 3:1. The arrangement comprises end-to-end modified helix/cylinder type antennas similar to that described in the referenced U.S. patent, and that shown in the prior art illustration of FIG. 1A.
The radiator according to FIG. 1A essentially comprises a conductive helix 1 and a conductive cylinder 2 arranged so as to permit this combination to be electrically tuned to specific frequencies. Tuning is accomplished through varying the effective inductance of the helix in relation to the capacitance of the cylinder by shorting out or electrically eliminating helix turns by way of a movable shorting bar 4- of fixed length. Power is fed to the antenna through a tap 5 discretely positioned or adjusted so as to produce the desired matching impedance with the transmission line 6. Through the additional use of a grounding switch 7, the antenna can be tuned, for example, over a frequency range of 2 to 30 MHz with standing wave ratios below 3 to I. As illustrated, the lower portion of the arrangement in FIG. IA is housed, for example, in the mast 8 of a submarine.
The desired tuning characteristics are thus derived by selecting the proper position of the shorting' element 4 by remote control means, and the proper setting of the grounding switch 7. More specifically, the shorting element 4 is driven or moved to a select position by a controlled electric motor (not shown), and held there. This position corresponds to the desired operating frequency and will have been determined for instance by a precalibrated digital readout on the front panel of a control unit (also not shown).
FIG. 13 represents the current/voltage distribution along the radiator arrangement ofFIG. 1A. In FIG. 1B, the abscissa represents magnitude and the ordinate the actual longitudinal displacement along the FIG. 1A ra diator. It is to be noted that the highest voltages are present at the cylindrical portion 2 of the antenna and the highest currents at the impedance matching tap point 5 on the helix 1. Also the current and voltage reach practically a steady-state situation along the greater length of the cylindrical portion 2 of the antenna.
Using the above-described arrangement, a suitable antenna can be configured to operate in a id-and %-W3Ve mode both for transmitting and receiving. However, this configuration, especially if it is sized to handle higher power for transmission, lends itself only to deck mounting in shipboard use.
If this circuitry were expanded to comprise the equivaient of two antennas mounted inversely end-to'end, it would become ground independent and could therefore become a yardarm-mounted antenna rather than a deck-mounted antenna. Such an arrangement is illustrated in FIG. 2A, with its corresponding current/voltage distribution graph given in FIG. 2B. As is also the case in the arrangement of FIG. 3, the illustrated configuration in FIG. 2A is depicted in a vertical orientation.
Two helix/cylinder type antennas It) and 20 are arranged end-to-end and physically separated by a common drive means 30 for providing synchronous tuning of the poles to the desired operating frequency. The arrangmeent is structurally oriented parallel to a ships mast (not shown), in being suspended at 32 from a yardarm 31 of that mast, by way of the housing or casing of the common drive means 30. The signal input to the antenna arrangement is at 33, shown as a coaxial input.
FIG. 28 illustrates the current/voltage distribution of each leg or half of the antenna arrangement of FIG. 2A. The solid lines depict respectively the IN distribution along the end-to-end inversely arranged radiators, while the dot-dashed lines depict, by comparison, the IN distribution of the lone radiator of FIG. 1A. To be particularly noted in the upper portion of FIG. 2B is the fact that for the same power applied to both antenna arrangements (FIG. 1A and FIG. 2A), the maximum magnitudes of I and E in one leg of the FIG. 2A arrangement are roughly half that of the FIG. 1A arrangement, while the latter also has associated therewith steeper l and E slopes or gradients, thus illustrating the greater electrical stress on the single helix/cylinder arrangement.
In becoming a 4i-wave dipole, rather than a ,4i-wave monopole, the individual antenna elements may become lighter in construction since the power will now be equally shared over two symmetrical configurations and components will operate under generally less electrical stress for the antennas equivalent power rating.
One common tuning drive, housed within the mounting case, mechanically synchronizes both poles to the required operating frequency.
Since a high powered antenna presents a radiation hazard to personnel, it is highly desirable to remove it from deck level to a remote location. Moreover, the removal of the antenna/tuner combination from the deck to upper mast and superstructure level is also highly desirable since deck space is always at a premium. The proposed inventive /z-wave dipole offers the capability for such yardarm installation for both receiving and transmitting antenna considerations.
FIG. 3 illustrates again the end-to-end arrangement of two helix/ cylinder type antennas, indicated generally as and 20, intercoupled by common drive means 30 arranged therebetween, indicated generally at 30. RF coaxial input (or output) 33 couples signal energy, through the wall of the antenna mount and casing 38 to a common feed point 39 by way of center conductor 33a, at which common feed point the power is essentially equally divided to be fed to tap feed points 15, 25 of the respective helix/ cylinder antennas 10, 20. While not particularly shown other than schematically by way of an arrow, the tap points 15, 25 are adjustable up and down the respective helices 1 1, 21, in order to establish the best possible impedance match with the input 33. It is intended that RF transmission line 33 run along the yardarm 31. Preferably, taps and 25 are adjustably controlled by a common means, either automatically by remote-control switching or otherwise; and that with the adjustment of one there is provided a simultaneous and equal adjustment of the other. It is well within the scope of this invention, however, that the individual setting of taps 15 and 25 may be by hand and separate. Moreover, provision may be made in conjunction with the discretely-stepped adjustment of switching taps to finely control the impedance match in vernier fashion with the continuous adjustment caused by the motordriven insertiona and withdrawl of a dielectric tuning slug 9 within the helix turns below the input tap, as shown in FIG. 1A. With the inclusion of the tuning slug element 9, an improvement in VSWR has been experienced in the order of 2:1.
To the horizontally arranged yardarm 31 of a ships mast (not shown) is coupled or clamped, by way of member 32, the antenna mount and casing 38 of the common drive means 30 arranged between the radiating halves of the antenna arrangement. This casing 38 houses a remotely controllable drive motor 34 which reversibly drives a common drive gear 35, which is mounted to the shaft 34a of motor 34 by way of gear backing 35a. Common drive gear 35 meshes with identical bevel gears 36 and 37 arranged to be at right angles with common gear 35 as shown, and to be driven in the respective directions illustrated by arrows 36b, 37b responsive to a rotation of the common gear 35 indicated by arrow 35b under the control of motor 34. Both bevel gears 36, 37 have backings 36a, 37a by way of which they are mountable to respective dielectric drive shafts 16 and 26. From the indicated rotation of bevel gears 36 and 37, dielectric drive shafts l6 and 26 respectively turn in the direction indicated by arrows 16a and 17a. Such a rotation of shafts 16 and 26 is intended to cause an outward movement (away from the common drive means) of shorting tubes 14, 24 respectively arranged about dielectric shafts 16, 26 and coupled thereto at least at one end by way of drive splines 17, 27.
This movement may be seen in substantially greater detail from the enlarged illustration in FIG. 4. Springloaded grooved rollers 41, mounted in the brush and guide hub portion 40 of the shorting tube 14, 24 ride on the helix 11, 21, the latter being shown mounted in a cylindrical-shaped, helically grooved mandrel 42, as the shorting tube rotates. This imparts a vertical thrust and movement to the shorting tube 14, 24 as it slides axially along the rotating spline drive shaft 16, 26. As shown, both the shorting brush 14a, 24a and the grooved roller 41 are spring-loaded mounted; a conductor 43 leads from the brush 14a, 24a to the body of the brush and guide portion 40 of the shorting tube 14, 24. FIG. 4 also shows the spline drive shaft 16, 26 as having a triangular example cross-section, indicated at 44. The arrangement of course causes the shorting tube 14, 24 and brush and guide hub 40 to rotate via this rotating shaft. At each end of the shorting tubes 14, 24 is a shorting brush 14a, 14b and 24a, 24b. Preferably, the drive spline associative to each shorting tube may be part of one of the shorting brushes. With the arrangement of the shafts 16, 26 and the shorting tubes 14, 24 inside the respective helix of each leg or half 10, 20 of the antenna arrangement, there is provided by way of motor 34 simultaneous synchronous variation of the position of the shorting tubes 14, 24 in like amount, thus changing the resonant frequency of operation in each leg 10, 20 equally. This is effected in that the two shorting brushes at each end of the shorting tubes are continuously in contact with the conductive and capacitive elements respectively of the associated helix/cylinder antenna, i.e., the shorting brush 24a of shorting tube 24 is, for example, in continual internal contact with the turns of the helix 21 of antenna portion 20, while the shorting brush 24b at the other end of tube 24 is continually in contact with the interior of the capacitive portion or cylinder 22, the counterpart of which in antenna 10 is cylinder 12. It is contemplated that since helices ll, 21 and capacitive portions 12, 22 are substantailly circular in cross-section and constant in profile, the faces of brushes 14a, 14b and 24a, 24b would readily be formed to provide intimate contact with their associated contact surfaces. It is to be noted that helices ll, 21 may be either left or right hand wound, but they are both to be wound the same way.
The helices ll, 21 are entirely arranged in respective dielectric radome sections 13, 23 with the cylinder capacitive portions 12-22 being arranged at the end of these dielectric radome portions 13-23. Provision may also be made for further capacitance associative to portions 12 and 22 by way of the addition of supplementary capacitive pieces 18, 28, which take the form of discs or spherical segments (not shown) mounted to the freeend of each cylinder 12, 22 in such a way as to form a corona cap capable of preventing electrical discharge from the capacitive member to space.
lri order that'simultaneous equal tuning of each half of the antenna arrangement may be effected, the two helices 11 and 21 and the two cylinders 12 and 22 should be constructed as nearly alike as possible. This means ideally that helices 11 and 21 should be of common material and have the same number of turns, the same turn pitch throughout, mounted on common insulating material, and be arranged the same distance from the center of the common drive means 30. Achievement, however, of near-ideal configuration is not a matter of considerable difficulty in the present state of the art. Likewise, cylinders 12 and 22 should be of common material and have substantially the same physical dimensions and position, yielding closely similar capacitances for a particular setting of shorting tubes 14, 24.
In the arrangement of FIG. 3, it may be appreciated that continued rotation of dielectric shafts 16, 26 in the directions indicated by arrows 16a, 26a will eventually enable the shorting tubes 14 and 24 to reach their outermost extended positions, which corresponds to the lowest frequency of operation of the antenna arrangement. in this setting, none or practically none of the helix turns are shorted out or rendered electrically irrelevant. Similarly with the shorting tubes 14, 24 at their respective innermost positions (approaching the tap feed points 15, 25), there is derived the highest frequency of operation.
In the above there has been described a substantial extension in the antenna art representing a solution of a long-recognized problem. Two frequency adjustable helix/cylinder type antennas have been arranged inversely end-to-end to provide a %-wave dipole antenna arrangement that is entirely ground plane independent. The end-to-end sections are arranged on a principal axis about a common drive means which, while providing the main structural support of the antenna arrangement, provides common drive synchronous equal tuning of both legs of the antenna arrangement.
While the principles of this invention have been described in connection with specific apparatus, it is to be understood that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation to the scope of the invention as set forth in the objects and features thereof and in the accompanying claims.
We claim:
1. A /2wave dipole antenna arrangement comprising a frequency-adjustable helix/cylinder type antennas arranged end-to-end inversely along a principal axis, and means arranged between said helix/cylinder radiators for providing simultaneous synchronous tuning thereof to the same desired resonant frequency of operation from a common drive source; and wherein each said helix/cylinder radiator includes a like-wound helix arranged to have its longitudinal dimension along said principal axis and one end thereof proximate said com mon drive means, a cylindrical capacitive portion also arranged with its longitudinal dimension along said principal axis and having one end thereof proximate the other end of the associated heiix, and shorting means of predetermined length arranged to be movable inside the associated cylindrical capacitive portion and helix and to be in continual contact therwith, for changing the resonant frequency of operation in accordance with a corresponding change in position of said shorting means along said principal axis.
2. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 wherein said common drive tuning means includes means for securing the antenna arrangement to a ships mast structure.
3. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 wherein said common drive means further includes an antenna mount and casing assembly to which are mounted the end-to-end inversely arranged helix/cylinder radiators.
4. The antenna arrangement according to claim 3 wherein said common drive means further includes, in side said mount and casing assembly, a remotely controllable motor controlling a common drive gear by way of the drive shaft of the former, said common drive gear being in mesh arrangement with a pair of bevel gears arranged to be facing each other and positioned at right angles to said common drive gear, the combined drive motor and gear arrangement providing simultaneous synchronous adjustment of the resonant frequency of each radiator.
5. The antenna arrangement according to claim 4 further comprising a radome portion surrounding the helix of each radiating half of the antenna arrangement, which randome portions each communicate at one end thereof with the mount and easing assembly of said common drive means.
6. The antenna arrangement according to claim 4 wherein said bevel gears are mounted on respective dielectric drive shafts communicating with said adjustable shorting means associated therewith for adjusting the resonant frequency of operation.
7. The antenna arrangement according to claim 6 wherein each said shorting means comprises a metallic shorting tube of substantially right cylindrical shape and having at each end a coaxially mounted discshaped shorting brush extension for providing said continual contact respectively with said cylindrical capacitive portion and said helix associated therewith.
8. The antenna arrangement according to claim 7 wherein said dielectric shafts communicate with said respective shorting means by way of at least one drive spline arrangement arranged on said shorting tubes.
9. The antenna arrangement according to claim 8 wherein said drive spline arrangement of each said shorting tube is included as part of one of said discshaped shorting brushes.
10. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 wherein RF signal energy is coupled between the antenna arrangement and an RF transmission line by way of a coaxial connection mounted through a side of the antenna mount and casing assembly of said common drive means, said coaxial connection being electrically coupled to a common feed point whereat the signal energy divides to be fed to each radiating half of the antenna arrangement.
11. The antenna arrangement according to claim 10 wherein the divided signal energy is fed to the respective helix portions of the two radiating halves of the antenna arrangement by way of respective adjustable taps, arranged to be movable along the helix associated therewith in a selection of a particular helix turn to structure arranged nearby.
13. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 further including a dielectric slug tuning means, movably arranged to be inserted in the axially direction into the end of the helix portion of each said helix/cylinder radiator nearest said common tuning means, for finely controlling impedance match of the antenna arrangement in vemier fashion through continuous adjustment capability.
Claims (13)
1. A 1/2 -wave dipole antenna arrangement comprising a frequency-adjustable helix/cylinder type antennas arranged endto-end inversely along a principal axis, and means arranged between said helix/cylinder radiators for providing simultaneous synchronous tuning thereof to the same desired resonant frequency of operation from a common drive source; and wherein each said helix/cylinder radiator includes a like-wound helix arranged to have its longitudinal dimension along said principal axis and one end thereof proximate said common drive means, a cylindrical capacitive portion also arranged with its longitudinal dimension along said principal axis and having one end thereof proximate the other end of the associated helix, and shorting means of predetermined length arranged to be movable inside the associated cylindrical capacitive portion and helix and to be in continual contact therwith, for changing the resonant frequency of operation in accordance with a corresponding change in position of said shorting means along said principal axis.
2. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 wherein said common drive tuning means includes means for securing the antenna arrangement to a ship''s mast structure.
3. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 wherein said common drive means further includes an antenna mount and casing assembly to which are mounted the end-to-end inversely arranged helix/cylinder radiators.
4. The antenna arrangement according to claim 3 wherein said common drive means further includes, inside said mount and casing assembly, a remotely controllable motor controlling a common drive gear by way of the drive shaft of the former, said common drive gear being in mesh arrangement with a pair of bevel gears arranged to be facing each other and positioned at right angles to said common drive gear, the combined drive motor and gear arrangement providing simultaneous synchronous adjustment of the resonant frequency of each radiator.
5. The antenna arrangement according to claim 4 further comprising a radome portion surrounding the helix of each radiating half of the antenna arrangement, which randome portions each communicate at one end thereof with the mount and casing assembly of said common drive means.
6. The antenna arrangement according to claim 4 wherein said bevel gears are mounted on respective dielectric drive shafts communicating with said adjustable shorting means associated therewith for adjusting the resonant frequency of operation.
7. The antenna arrangement according to claim 6 wherein each said shorting means comprises a metallic shorting tube of substantially right cylindrical shape and having at each end a coaxially mounted disc-shaped shorting brush extension for providing said continual contact respectively with said cylindrical capacitive portion and said helix associated therewith.
8. The antenna arrangement according to claim 7 wherein said dielectric shafts communicate with said respective shorting means by way of at least one drive spline arrangement arranged on said shorting tubes.
9. The antenna arrangement according to claim 8 wherein said drive spline arrangement of each said shorting tube is included as part of one of said disc-shaped shorting brushes.
10. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 wherein RF signal energy is coupled between the antenna arrangement and an RF transmission line by way of a coaxial connection mounted through a side of the antenna mount and casing assembly of said common drive means, said coaxial connection being electrically coupled to a common feed point whereat the signal energy divides to be fed to each radiating half of the antenna arrangement.
11. The antenna arrangement according to claim 10 wherein the divided signal energy is fed to the respective helix portions of the two radiating halves of the antenna arrangement by way of respective adjustable taps, arranged to be movable along the helix associated therewith in a selection of a particular helix turn to thereby provide an impedance match with said RF transmission line.
12. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 surther comprising a pair of disc-shaped supplementary capacitive members mountable on the free end of the respective cylindrical capacitive portions of the two radiating halves of the antenna arrangement, each said member by way of its shape serving also the function of a corona cap for discouraging corona discharge from the associated cylindrical capacitive portion to other structure arranged nearby.
13. The antenna arrangement according to claim 1 further including a dielectric slug tuning means, movably arranged to be inserted in the axially direction into the end of the helix portion of each said helix/cylinder radiator nearest said common tuning means, for finely controlling impedance match of the antenna arrangement in vernier fashion through continuous adjustment capability.
Priority Applications (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US00324607A US3818488A (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1973-01-18 | Shipboard yardarm half-wave antenna |
NL7400694A NL7400694A (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1974-01-18 | |
FR7401764A FR2214979A1 (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1974-01-18 |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US00324607A US3818488A (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1973-01-18 | Shipboard yardarm half-wave antenna |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US3818488A true US3818488A (en) | 1974-06-18 |
Family
ID=23264332
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US00324607A Expired - Lifetime US3818488A (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1973-01-18 | Shipboard yardarm half-wave antenna |
Country Status (3)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US3818488A (en) |
FR (1) | FR2214979A1 (en) |
NL (1) | NL7400694A (en) |
Cited By (10)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3902178A (en) * | 1974-03-22 | 1975-08-26 | Itt | Helical antenna with improved temperature characteristics |
US3961332A (en) * | 1975-07-24 | 1976-06-01 | Middlemark Marvin P | Elongated television receiving antenna for indoor use |
US3999186A (en) * | 1975-12-24 | 1976-12-21 | International Telephone And Telegraph Corporation | High power, high-frequency, high-voltage drive coupling for an antenna |
US3999185A (en) * | 1975-12-23 | 1976-12-21 | International Telephone And Telegraph Corporation | Plural antennas on common support with feed line isolation |
US4330783A (en) * | 1979-11-23 | 1982-05-18 | Toia Michael J | Coaxially fed dipole antenna |
US4442438A (en) * | 1982-03-29 | 1984-04-10 | Motorola, Inc. | Helical antenna structure capable of resonating at two different frequencies |
US4504834A (en) * | 1982-12-22 | 1985-03-12 | Motorola, Inc. | Coaxial dipole antenna with extended effective aperture |
US4620194A (en) * | 1982-11-16 | 1986-10-28 | Joaquin Bel Moratalla | Tunable antenna with variable series L-C network |
WO1993006631A1 (en) * | 1991-09-23 | 1993-04-01 | Allied-Signal, Inc. | Adjustable helical antenna for a vhf radio |
US5706018A (en) * | 1996-06-21 | 1998-01-06 | Yankielun; Norbert E. | Multi-band, variable, high-frequency antenna |
Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US1911234A (en) * | 1930-03-08 | 1933-05-30 | Raymond B Meyer | Antenna system |
US3623113A (en) * | 1969-08-21 | 1971-11-23 | Chu Associates | Balanced tunable helical monopole antenna |
-
1973
- 1973-01-18 US US00324607A patent/US3818488A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1974
- 1974-01-18 NL NL7400694A patent/NL7400694A/xx unknown
- 1974-01-18 FR FR7401764A patent/FR2214979A1/fr not_active Withdrawn
Patent Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US1911234A (en) * | 1930-03-08 | 1933-05-30 | Raymond B Meyer | Antenna system |
US3623113A (en) * | 1969-08-21 | 1971-11-23 | Chu Associates | Balanced tunable helical monopole antenna |
Cited By (11)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3902178A (en) * | 1974-03-22 | 1975-08-26 | Itt | Helical antenna with improved temperature characteristics |
US3961332A (en) * | 1975-07-24 | 1976-06-01 | Middlemark Marvin P | Elongated television receiving antenna for indoor use |
US3999185A (en) * | 1975-12-23 | 1976-12-21 | International Telephone And Telegraph Corporation | Plural antennas on common support with feed line isolation |
US3999186A (en) * | 1975-12-24 | 1976-12-21 | International Telephone And Telegraph Corporation | High power, high-frequency, high-voltage drive coupling for an antenna |
US4330783A (en) * | 1979-11-23 | 1982-05-18 | Toia Michael J | Coaxially fed dipole antenna |
US4442438A (en) * | 1982-03-29 | 1984-04-10 | Motorola, Inc. | Helical antenna structure capable of resonating at two different frequencies |
US4620194A (en) * | 1982-11-16 | 1986-10-28 | Joaquin Bel Moratalla | Tunable antenna with variable series L-C network |
US4504834A (en) * | 1982-12-22 | 1985-03-12 | Motorola, Inc. | Coaxial dipole antenna with extended effective aperture |
WO1993006631A1 (en) * | 1991-09-23 | 1993-04-01 | Allied-Signal, Inc. | Adjustable helical antenna for a vhf radio |
US5274393A (en) * | 1991-09-23 | 1993-12-28 | Allied-Signal Inc. | Adjustable helical antenna for a VHF radio |
US5706018A (en) * | 1996-06-21 | 1998-01-06 | Yankielun; Norbert E. | Multi-band, variable, high-frequency antenna |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
FR2214979A1 (en) | 1974-08-19 |
NL7400694A (en) | 1974-07-22 |
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Legal Events
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AS | Assignment |
Owner name: ITT CORPORATION Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:INTERNATIONAL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CORPORATION;REEL/FRAME:004389/0606 Effective date: 19831122 |