bionic (1) output.1.gz

Provided by: yagiuda_1.19-9build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       output - Yagi-Uda project antenna display program

SYNOPSIS

       output [ - cehps ] [ -EE_max ] [ -HHmax ] [ -rminimum ] [ -Rmaximum ] [ -ZZo ]

       filename

DESCRIPTION

       The  program  output  is  one  of  a  number of executable programs that forms part of a set of programs,
       collectively known as the Yagi-Uda project , which were designed for analysis and optimisation  of  Yagi-
       Uda  antennas.   output  calculates  the  gain,  FB ratio, input impedance etc etc of an antenna that was
       described by the program input or first and has had the element currents calculated with the program yagi
       The  data  about  the forward gain, VSWR, FB ratio, input impedance etc is written to a file filename.dat
       Angular data, giving the variation of gain with theta and phi is put into a file filename.gai
       Sometimes the program fails to find the 3dB bandwidths in the E and  H  planes,  and  bombs  out  with  a
       'zbrent' error. This can occur if:
       (1)  The  antenna  has an almost isotropic pattern, in which case its never 3dB down, so the 3dB point is
       undefined.
       (2) The 3dB point is outside the assumed angular range.  You then have to either:
       (a) Calculate with the -e option, which avoids calculation of the 3dB E-plane beamwidth or
       (b) Do (a) above, then find approximately where the 3dB point is (from the .gai file - see  later),  then
       set options -E and -H so the program calculates them properly.

       The  DOS .EXE files as distributed require a 387 maths coprocessor to be present and will not run without
       it. A 486, Pentium, and I assume later processors of this series will run it without any extra  hardware.
       The DOS files are no longer being maintained, so are out of sync with the latest source.

OPTIONS

       -c     Calculate  the  maximum  level of any sidelobe - not just the rear on as the FB ratio tells us. If
              the sidelobe and FB ratio are equal, it means the  biggest  sidelobe  is  the  rear  one.  If  the
              Sidelobe is less than the FB ratio, then another lobe is more significant. Look in the '.gai' file
              (see below) to see where it is. This option slows the program quite a bit.

       -e     Suppress calculation of the 3dB E-plane bandwidth. This is sometimes necessary if the programme is
              unable to find the 3 dB beamwidth, to prevent an error occuring.

       -h     Suppress calculation of the 3dB H-plane bandwidth. This is sometimes necessary if the programme is
              unable to find the 3 dB beamwidth, to prevent an error occuring.

       -p     Put data into a file filename.freq for reading into gnuplot, and a commmand file  filename.gc  for
              gnuplot to use. (run 'output -p filename' then 'gnuplot filename.gc' )

       -s     Suppress all diagnostic output. By default, the program print the percentage of the job completed.

       -EE_max
              When  the  program  computes the E-plane 3dB beamwidth, it assumes the antenna pattern is 3dB down
              somewhere in the range 90 to Emax, where E_max is by default 179 degrees. This can fail if  it  is
              never  3dB  down  in  the  range,  or if it happened to go 3dB down in two or more points. You can
              change E_max, if you need to, but rarely if every should need to. I've never seen a failure  here,
              but  are  guarding  against  one.  If you don't want the pattern, use the -e option instead, which
              skips it. See also '-H' below.

       -HH_max
              When the program computes the H-plane 3dB beamwidth, it assumes the antenna pattern  is  3dB  down
              somewhere  in  the  range  0 to Hmax, where H_max is by defualt 60 degrees. This can fail if it is
              never 3dB down in the range, or if it happended to go 3dB down in two or more points. Also, if  it
              goes  more  than 3dB down, but that starts to come up again. You can change H_max, if you need to,
              as failures do occasionally occur. If you don't want the pattern use -h option instead, which will
              skip it.
              An obvious example of an antenna where you cant find the 3dB bandwidth for the H-plane is the 1ele
              dipole. The radiation is symmetrical about its axis, so the level is the same everywhere in the  H
              plane. The program automatically avoids calculating it for a 1 ele beam.

       -ZZo   Zo  is  the  characteristic impedance used when calculating the VSWR. By default it's 50 Ohms, but
              can be changed to any real, positive value.

        filename
              is the name of the file containing the antenna description. It is  expected  to  be  in  a  format
              created  by  input or first - two other programs in the Yagi-Uda project.  The is also expected to
              exist a binary file filename.out created by typing yagi filename

Limitations

       I'm not aware of any limitations, apart from  that  filenames,  including  full  path,  can't  exceed  90
       characters.

FILES

       filename        ASCII file with antenna description.
       filename.out    Binary data file, created by yagi.
       filename.dat    ASCII file with gain, FB ratio etc.
       filename.gai    ASCII file with angular dependence of gain.

SEE ALSO

       first(1), input(1), yagi(1), optimise(1).

PLATFORMS

       Both  DOS  and Unix versions have been built. The DOS version as distributed requires a 386 PC with a 387
       maths coprocessor.

BUGS

       Bugs should be reported to david.kirkby@onetel.net.  Bugs tend actually  to  be  fixed  if  they  can  be
       isolated, so it is in your interest to report them in such a way that they can be easily reproduced.  The
       program gives errors if element lengths are well away from a half-wave (by a  factor  of  ~3)  due  to  a
       breakdown  in  the  equations.   If  the input file is edited manually and done incorrectly, there can be
       unpredictable results.

AUTHORS

       Dr. David Kirkby G8WRB (david.kirkby@onetel.net).  with help with converting to DOS  from  Dr.  Joe  Mack
       NA3T (mack@fcrfv2.ncifcrf.gov)