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CHA MPAS 2.0
Page 8
s.
Extension Base
The Extension Base is used to connect the Antenna Extension (q) to the Hybrid Micro (a).
t.
Coaxial Cable
(not shown)
The Coaxial Cable (CHA 50’ COAX) consist of 50 feet of 50 Ohm coaxial cable with an integrated Radio
Frequency Interference (RFI) choke. Both ends of the coaxial cable are terminated with a UHF Connector Plug
(PL-259 or a Type N Connector on one end, which is available as a special order for Government/Military, Non-
Governmental Organization (NGO), and commercial use).
u.
Backpack
(not shown)
The Backpack, not shown, is an olive-green military-style backpack used to store the components of the MPAS
2.0.
Antenna Configurations
Using the supplied components*, the CHA MPAS 2.0 can be deployed into a number of operationally useful
configurations. Six configurations,
see table (2), are described in this manual, each with unique performance
characteristics. *
Note: you will also need approximately 50 feet of Paracord or other low-stretch synthetic line, a
tent stake, and a plastic mallet.
Configuration
Ground Short Medium Long Directionality
Manpack Vertical
↕
Omnidirectional
Portable Vertical
↕
↑
Omnidirectional
Horizontal NVIS
↓
↑
Omnidirectional
Sloping Wire
↓
↕
Unidirectional
Inverted “L”
↓
↕
Bidirectional
End-Fed Inverted “V”
↕
↓
↑
Bidirectional
Table 2. Antenna Configuration Selection.
The table can assist the operator to quickly select the most appropriate antenna configuration to meet their
operational requirements. To use the table, decide which distance column (Ground = 0 to 90 miles, Short = 0 - 300
miles, Medium = 300 – 1500 miles, Long > 1500 miles) best matches the distance to the station with whom you
need to communicate. Then, determine if the OWF is in the lower (↓ = 1.8 – 10 MHz) or upper (↑ = 10 – 30 MHz)
frequency range. Finally, select the antenna configuration with the corresponding symbol in the appropriate
distance column. All CHA MPAS 2.0 configurations provide some capability in each distance category, so
depending upon the complexity of your communications network, you may need to select the best overall
configuration. The directionality column indicates the predominate directionality characteristic of the antenna
configuration. When using NVIS, all the configurations are omnidirectional. Most configuration and frequency
combinations will require a wide range antenna tuner or coupler.
Manpack Vertical
The CHA MPAS 2.0 Manpack Vertical configuration is a broadband short-range HF/VHF-LO antenna. This
configuration, see figure (1), use four components from the CHA MPAS 2.0: CHA MIL WHIP 2.0, CHA HYBRID MINI