UNCLASSIFIED
TM-CAL-016
KNOWN-LENGTH DIPOLE STANDARD
Physically Measured Half-Wave Dipole as Antenna Analyzer Frequency Reference
Prepared by: Mervyn Martin, KO6NNH
Merced, California  •  26 May 2026
Amateur Radio / Electronics — Not for commercial calibration use

CHAPTER 1 — GENERAL INFORMATION

1-1. SCOPE

This manual covers use of a physically measured half-wave dipole antenna as a frequency standard and antenna analyzer calibration reference. At resonance, the dipole exhibits a known impedance (~70 Ω) and a predictable resonant frequency based on physical length. This provides a quick sanity check for NanoVNA calibration and antenna analyzers.

CHAPTER 2 — THEORY OF OPERATION

2-1. HALF-WAVE DIPOLE RESONANCE

Free-space half-wave dipole resonant frequencyfr (MHz) = 150 / Lm
With end effect (velocity factor ~0.95 for wire)fr (MHz) = 142.5 / Lm or fr (MHz) = 468 / Lft

Where L is the total tip-to-tip length. At resonance, feedpoint impedance is approximately 70–73 Ω in free space; ground effects reduce this to 20–50 Ω near ground. Height above ground affects both resonant frequency (lowered slightly) and feedpoint impedance.

Dipole Resonant Frequencies vs. Total Length
Total Length (m)Total Length (ft)Resonant Freq (MHz)Band
20.0765.87.140m CW
10.0332.914.220m SSB
6.6921.921.315m
4.7815.729.810m
2.006.5671.34m/VHF

2-2. NANOVANA MEASUREMENT

The NanoVNA measures complex impedance Z = R + jX. At resonance: X = 0 (or near zero). The resonant frequency is observed as the zero-crossing of the reactance curve, or as the minimum of |S11|.

CHAPTER 3 — MATERIALS AND CONSTRUCTION

3-1. DIPOLE CONSTRUCTION

Materials
ItemSpecification
Wire#14–#18 AWG bare copper or aluminum, measured to ±5 mm
Center insulatorCeramic or UHMW polyethylene
End insulatorsCeramic strain insulators
Feed coaxRG-58 or RG-174, 1/2 wavelength preferred (reduces common mode)
Ferrite choke5 turns #14 AWG through T240-43 or 3 FB-31-5621 beads

CHAPTER 4 — ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES

  1. Calculate total dipole length for target frequency: L(m) = 142.5 / f(MHz).
  2. Cut wire to calculated length, measuring total tip-to-tip at final assembled length. Include connector pigtail in total length.
  3. Connect center of dipole to coax center; both halves are half of total length.
  4. Install ferrite choke balun at feedpoint to reduce common mode current.
  5. String dipole horizontally at height ≥λ/4 above ground for near-free-space behavior.
  6. Record exact measured length in calibration log.

CHAPTER 5 — CALIBRATION PROCEDURE

  1. Connect dipole feed coax to NanoVNA PORT 1 (through ferrite choke).
  2. Set NanoVNA center frequency to designed fr, span ±10%.
  3. Display |S11| and reactance (X) vs. frequency.
  4. Find frequency where X = 0 (reactance zero crossing). This is fresonant.
  5. Compare fresonant to calculated: error% = (fmeas − fcalc) / fcalc × 100.
  6. If fmeas < fcalc: dipole is electrically longer than expected (nearby objects, velocity factor, or ground proximity effects).
  7. If NanoVNA reads fmeas correctly compared to GPS/WWV reference, the NanoVNA frequency axis is calibrated.

CHAPTER 6 — TUNING AND ADJUSTMENT

To trim dipole to exact target frequency: shorten from tips in 5 cm increments if frequency is too low; add wire clips if too high. Re-measure after each adjustment. Height, proximity to trees/buildings, and ground conductivity all affect resonant frequency.

CHAPTER 7 — VERIFICATION

  1. Compare dipole fresonant against WWV frequency to verify NanoVNA frequency accuracy.
  2. Verify feedpoint R at resonance: R = 50–90 Ω depending on height. Values outside 20–120 Ω suggest calibration error or connection issue.
  3. Log: wire length, height, fcalc, fmeas, R at resonance, date.

APPENDIX A — CALCULATIONS AND FORMULAS

Total dipole length for resonanceLtotal (m) = 142.5 / f (MHz)
Each leg lengthLleg = Ltotal / 2
Velocity factor adjustmentLactual = Lfree-space × VF (typically 0.95 for wire)

APPENDIX B — EXAMPLE RESULTS

Dipole Resonance Measurements
Target fL total (m)Height (m)fcalc (MHz)fmeas (MHz)R (Ω)
7.100 MHz20.076.17.1007.03248
14.200 MHz10.035.014.20014.15562
21.300 MHz6.694.521.30021.2461