
Trees as Conductors: Measuring Natural Impacts on HF Radio
By N6LFThis article published on QEX details measurements of tree conductivity and permittivity at HF frequencies, addressing a long-debated topic in amateur radio. N6LF conducted experimental impedance measurements on Douglas fir and maple trees using a vector network analyzer with rings of nails inserted into tree trunks. Results showed that tree conductivity increases with frequency while relative permittivity decreases, similar to soil characteristics. Measured conductivity ranged from 0.06 to 0.4 S/m at 10 MHz, aligning with values used in previous research. These findings validate that NEC modeling can reliably estimate trees' substantial impact on HF antenna performance.
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You will find this resource in just one category on our links directory. The title of the main category is Theory and it deals mainly with Antenna theory, basics,design antenna. The link to this resource has been on our site since Friday Apr 25 2025, and it has been followed 40 times. So far no one has rated it yet. Be the first to rate it!Last updated: 2025-04-25
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