Theory of Long Wire Antennas

Date: 2026-01-12

  • A long wire antenna is a straight conductor longer than about half a wavelength.
  • As length increases, the current distribution forms multiple standing-wave lobes.
  • The radiation pattern narrows in the plane of the wire and develops multiple main lobes.
  • End effects increase the physical length compared to ideal free-space calculations.
  • Height above ground and soil conductivity strongly affect impedance and pattern.
  • End-fed long wires typically present high feed impedance at the end.
  • Feed impedance varies substantially with frequency and wire length.
  • Counterpoise or earth connection is required for end-fed systems.
  • Balanced feed can be used with center-fed or off-center-fed long wires.
  • For portable HF, random-length wires are common with tuners.
  • Efficiency is driven by conductor loss and ground loss.
  • Modeling is recommended because formulas are approximate.