Mount for SETI Horn of Plenty

141 views
Skip to first unread message

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 23, 2026, 4:25:51 PM (8 days ago) May 23
to 'b alex pettit jr' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Just finished the mount for my Horn of Plenty today (hydrogen line horn). Made from wood of spare pallet (neighbour is doing building work and this was left over). Paint given away free at local recycle centre - so mount cost virtually nothing to build.

......I just hope it works now!

Andy
20260523_201630_resized.jpg

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 23, 2026, 6:58:13 PM (8 days ago) May 23
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Cool,  fire it up  and post    some  results!!

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 23, 2026, 7:20:02 PM (8 days ago) May 23
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
My  observations are on hold  while I refinish  my  deck....   deck_refinish.jpeg

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 23, 2026, 8:03:40 PM (8 days ago) May 23
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Seems to me  like a rectangular  wave guide... how  do the modes  change as the   guide shrinks?

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 23, 2026, 8:52:52 PM (8 days ago) May 23
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
How is the  taper   selected/calculated?

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 24, 2026, 10:47:04 AM (8 days ago) May 24
to sara...@googlegroups.com
I don't understand all that stuff! I just did what it says on SETI!!!!


From: 'Stephen Arbogast' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, May 24, 2026 1:52:52 AM
To: Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [SARA] Re: Mount for SETI Horn of Plenty
 
--
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To post to this group, send email to sara...@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
sara-list-...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/sara-list?hl=en
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sara-list+...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/94f422c1-d8db-4aef-b4aa-880fe1246ba0n%40googlegroups.com.

Mike Otte

unread,
May 24, 2026, 11:54:18 AM (8 days ago) May 24
to sara...@googlegroups.com
Your thinking like an engineer!  Not the craftsman/hobbist that has 1 sheet (4' x8') of foam or steel to make it out of.  You want maximum length which will be the cross width of the sheet of foam  and you want 4 pieces to meet up with the feed at the narrow end (4" x 6") and at the wide end the same ratio as big as you can get.

--
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To post to this group, send email to sara...@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
sara-list-...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/sara-list?hl=en
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sara-list+...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/94f422c1-d8db-4aef-b4aa-880fe1246ba0n%40googlegroups.com.


--
Mike Otte W9YS

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 24, 2026, 12:14:28 PM (8 days ago) May 24
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 24, 2026, 2:55:19 PM (8 days ago) May 24
to sara...@googlegroups.com
I have just read that McMaster lecture.....LOTS of complex equations! Don't understand any of them.
Andy
From: 'Stephen Arbogast' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, May 24, 2026 5:14:28 PM
To: Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [SARA] Re: Mount for SETI Horn of Plenty
 

Adrian

unread,
May 24, 2026, 9:21:56 PM (7 days ago) May 24
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Yes Andrew I agree.
  That treatise is worthy of at least an MS in EE electromagnetic theory's worth of background for any significant level of comprehenson.
 For my simpliifed undersatnding then, a larger horn aperture produces a narrower beam (more planar wavefront), and the horn’s flare angle controls how smoothly that aperture field is transformed from the free space ~377 ohms  into the TE₁₀ waveguide mode impedance as it collapses toward the throat and is then matched at the probe to as close to 50 Ohms as its placement and dimensions allow.

Adrian

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 25, 2026, 4:09:30 AM (7 days ago) May 25
to sara...@googlegroups.com
Hi Adrian,
Thanks for the idiots guide!
Can a horn be made larger simply by adding an extension to end of same flare angle, or does ot need to have different flare angle?
Could I, for example, if I so wished, just add a bit to end of my Horn of Plenty to make it bigger? Give it some Viagra, as it were?
Andy


From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Adrian <kjan...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 2:21:56 AM

Cathal O'Donghaile

unread,
May 25, 2026, 4:21:02 AM (7 days ago) May 25
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Andy, what material are you using for inside the horn?

Cathal

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 25, 2026, 4:22:45 AM (7 days ago) May 25
to sara...@googlegroups.com
The horn is made of galvanised steel sheet, with 
From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Cathal O'Donghaile <cathalod...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 9:21:02 AM

Cathal O'Donghaile

unread,
May 25, 2026, 4:24:32 AM (7 days ago) May 25
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Oh very good. Can't do better than that lol

Adrian

unread,
May 25, 2026, 5:56:39 AM (7 days ago) May 25
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Andrew, absolutely.
 Think of it like an optical telescope, the larger the primary mirror or reflector then the smaller field of view and the more light gathered so the fainter the objects able to be observed.. Keeping the same flare angle preserves the same impedance matching gradient and the only things that are changed is the horn lenght, width, weight, beamwidth and gain but what doesn't change then is  the VSWR which stays essentially unchanged.  Actually, also the framing around the perifery of the horn aperture might also provide some reduction in the side lobes as the "edge curvatures" reduce the rim knife edge refractions somewhat that contribute to  side lobes. See figures on pp 21 of that high end but excellent reference of horn antennas electromagnetic theory..

Adrian

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 25, 2026, 7:01:16 AM (7 days ago) May 25
to sara...@googlegroups.com
Ahhhh! So I can just build an extension with same angles if I want
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 10:56:38 AM

Ayushman Tripathi

unread,
May 25, 2026, 4:17:11 PM (6 days ago) May 25
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers

Hi Andrew,

Really nice build!

Quick question: how do you think this'll perform vs a 1m dish with a cantenna at H-line?

Also, I found the original Horn of Plenty image from the SETI League site:
Screenshot From 2026-05-25 16-06-03.png

https://setileague.org/photos/wghorn.htm

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 25, 2026, 5:03:24 PM (6 days ago) May 25
to sara...@googlegroups.com
That was the picture I was trying to copy!
I'll let you know about the comparison with other antennas once I have completed testing.
Andy




From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Ayushman Tripathi <ayushmantr...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 9:17:15 pm

To: Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [SARA] Re: Mount for SETI Horn of Plenty
--

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To post to this group, send email to sara...@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
sara-list-...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/sara-list?hl=en
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to sara-list+...@googlegroups.com.

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 25, 2026, 9:51:17 PM (6 days ago) May 25
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers

Andrew,

I am sorry  if  I  insulted you....  I started  Electrical  Engineering   in  1970  at  CU  Boulder,  Colorado.   I discovered Maxwell's  equations  and they changed  my way of  thinking. I  switched to Physics  and have loved it  ever  since.

Maxwell's equations are the  foundations  of understanding  all  electricity  and  magnetism....  along  with  some  Calculus.

See   


So  you  start  with  the TE10  mode of  a   wave  guide  then  you  flare out the wave  guide into a horn....   as  Adrian  has   explained..  very  cool  stuff.

Stephen

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 25, 2026, 11:19:25 PM (6 days ago) May 25
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Young  people need  to  know   this if     considering a career in either   Physics  or   Electrical  Engineering...........

Really  cool  stuff!
Stephen

Stephen Arbogast

unread,
May 26, 2026, 12:52:07 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Some   times the   solution is   very  simple.....     I have been  having  problems  with some  solar lights  on  my deck...   solved the   problem  today  by  stuffing  some  thin paper into the side of  the   led  bulb socket  on  side away  from electrical  contact.. it   works!   

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 26, 2026, 3:38:32 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com
Hi Stephen,

No apologies needed - I am not insulted in any way whatsoever.

Actually, I am very pleased that you have taken the time to comment on items I have posted - dont stop doing that! Nothing worse than posting something which then appears to be ignored!

(Actually, I dont think I ever get ignored in this group - but you know what I mean!)

So, keep going as you are, and dont worry about me.

Andy

From: 'Stephen Arbogast' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2026 5:52:10 am

Marko Cebokli

unread,
May 26, 2026, 5:03:10 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com

A horn with a significantly bigger aperture must have a smaller opening angle, otherwise the phase error at the aperture will be too big. Imagine a sphere with the center at the horn throat, and its deviation from a flat plane at the horn mouth. You want that to be less than lambda/4 or so. High gain horns tend to be quite long!

If you just want to add 30% or so to the aperture, it might still work with the original flare angle.

There are a lot of online horn calculators, just search for "horn antenna calculator".

Marko Cebokli


25.05.2026 13:01, je 'Andrew Thornett' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers napisal

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 26, 2026, 5:12:47 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com
Hi Marko,

I think this os what prompted me to ask the question in the first place - but I dont fully understand the issue involved.

Do you know of an idiots' guide to this phase error thing I can read - or better still video I can watch that uses very short words and simple equations (and is aimed at kindergarten).

Andy


From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Marko Cebokli <s57...@hamradio.si>
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2026 10:03:02 AM
To: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com>

Marko Cebokli

unread,
May 26, 2026, 8:23:34 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com

Hello Andy!

For maximum gain (at boresight), you want a plane wave (flat wavefront) with constant amplitude across the aperture of your antenna. For lower sidelobes, you still want a flat wavefront, but with an amplitude taper towards the edges, which will cost you gain (a tradeoff).

With a flat wavefront, the contributions from all parts of the aperture will add in phase at infinity. If the wavefront is not flat, the sum will not be maximum, because the "arrows" will not point in the same direction (remember vector addition - or adding horizontally shifted sinewaves).

Wavefronts emanating from a point (throat of your horn) are spherical. The longer the horn with the same aperture, the flatter they will be at the aperture - the less difference there will be between the path from the throat to the center and edges of the aperture. 

You can also imagine the situation on receive. The wavefronts from the source in the far field (which condition is true for astronomical sources) are flat (means the same as the rays are parallel). Once they perfectly simultaneously arrive across your horn aperture, they must now reach the horn throat, and the ones impinging near the edges will have a longer path than those that came in at the center. You want to minimize this difference, so they add as much "in step" as possible. With a simple horn, these differences will never be zero, but with a sufficiently long horn, you can reduce them to acceptable values. You can correct the phase error of a short horn with a lens at the aperture, but that is practical only for small horns (X band and up), with a L band horn with 1m aperture, the lens would probably weigh 100 kg...

The required length increases very fast with the aperture, so horns with more than 20..25dBi of gain are really not practical (well, maybe at mm waves).

Marko Cebokli


26.05.2026 11:12, je 'Andrew Thornett' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers napisal

Andrew Thornett

unread,
May 26, 2026, 8:56:19 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com

Thabks Marko for making such a large efffort to explain it to me. My attempts to understand what youre saying in capitals below - please correct me if Im wrong.

Andy


Hello Andy!

For maximum gain (at boresight), you want a plane wave (flat wavefront) with constant amplitude across the aperture of your antenna. For lower sidelobes, you still want a flat wavefront, but with an amplitude taper towards the edges, which will cost you gain (a tradeoff).

THE BEST HYDROGEN HORN IS ONE WHERE THE RADIO WAVES ARE PARALLEL AT THE FRONT END OF THE HORN - A BIT LIKE WHEN I AM DOING SOLAR ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY USONG A DAYSTAR QUARK FILTER WHICH NEEDS PARALLEL WAVES OF LIGHT.

HOWEVER, TO GET RID OF THESE SIDE LOBES (A BAD THING AS THE MORE ENERGY THAT IS WASTED IN SIDE LOBES THEN THE LESS THE TELESCOPE CAN COLLECT AT THE CENTRAL WAVEGUIDE) THE WAVES SHOULD NOT BE PARALLEL - SO THERE HAS TO BE A COMPROMISE.

With a flat wavefront, the contributions from all parts of the aperture will add in phase at infinity. If the wavefront is not flat, the sum will not be maximum, because the "arrows" will not point in the same direction (remember vector addition - or adding horizontally shifted sinewaves).

I GUESS THST IS AN EXPLANATIOJ OF THE FIRST BIT, SO IF I DO NOT UNDERSTAND IT FULLY, THEN I CAN STILL PRODUCE A WORJING HORN, AS LONG AS I APPLY THE PRINCIPLES.

Wavefronts emanating from a point (throat of your horn) are spherical. The longer the horn with the same aperture, the flatter they will be at the aperture - the less difference there will be between the path from the throat to the center and edges of the aperture. 

OH RIGHT, SO IF THE HORN IS TRANSMITT9NG THEN IT HAS TO TURN SPHERICAL WAVES FROM THE MONOPOLE IN THE WAVEGUIDE INTO FLAT WAVES AT THE FRONT OF THE HORN.

CONVERSELY, IF THE HORN IS RECEIVING AS WE DO, THEN FLAT WAVES NEED TO BECOME SPHERICAL WAVES - IS THAT RIGHT?

You can also imagine the situation on receive. The wavefronts from the source in the far field (which condition is true for astronomical sources) are flat (means the same as the rays are parallel). 

THAT MAKES SENSE TO ME - LIGHT INCLUDING RADIO WAVES - COMES FROM SKY SOURCES EFFECTIVELY AT INFINITY AS THEY ARE SO FAR AWAY SO THEIR RAYS ARE FLAT WHEN THEY REACH MY HORN ANTENNA.

Once they perfectly simultaneously arrive across your horn aperture, they must now reach the horn throat, and the ones impinging near the edges will have a longer path than those that came in at the center.

MAKES SENSE - RAYS ON OUTSIDE HAVE TO TRAVEL FURTHER TO MEET AT A CENTRAL POINT THAN CENTRAL RAYS - IF THE HORN IS 4M LONG AND 2M WIDE THEN CENTRAL RAYS TRAVEL 4M TO THIS POINT BUT OUTSIDE RAYS MUST TRAVEL SQUARE ROOT OF (2 x 2 + 4 x 4) = 4.47m [Pythagorus theorum].

You want to minimize this difference, so they add as much "in step" as possible. With a simple horn, these differences will never be zero, but with a sufficiently long horn, you can reduce them to acceptable values. 

I SEE - THIS IS THE PHASE ERROR - BASICSLLY, THE PHASE DIFFERENCE ORODUDED BY DIFFERENT PATH LENGTHS FROM CENTRE TO OUTSIDE OF HORN.

You can correct the phase error of a short horn with a lens at the aperture, but that is practical only for small horns (X band and up), with a L band horn with 1m aperture, the lens would probably weigh 100 kg...

THIS BIT ABOVE I DONT UNDERSTAND - HOW CAN YOU CORRECT IT?

The required length increases very fast with the aperture, so horns with more than 20..25dBi of gain are really not practical (well, maybe at mm waves).

SMALLER WAVELENGTHS MEAN SMALLER HORNS SO YOU CAN EFFECTIVELY BUILD LOT LONGER HORNS - LONGER RELATOVE TO WAVELENGTH THEY ARE MEASURING.

Marko Cebokli

Previously, you said the following - can O also ask you the questions below:

A horn with a significantly bigger aperture must have a smaller opening angle, otherwise the phase error at the aperture will be too big. Imagine a sphere with the center at the horn throat, and its deviation from a flat plane at the horn mouth. You want that to be less than lambda/4 or so. High gain horns tend to be quite long!

WHY LAMBDA/4 = WHAT IS MAGICAL ABOUT THAT VALUE?

If you just want to add 30% or so to the aperture, it might still work with the original flare angle.

WHY 30% AGAIN WHY IS 3P% SPECIAL?
SORRY FOR ALL THE QUERIES!
ANDY
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2026 1:23:25 PM

A. C.

unread,
May 26, 2026, 9:31:30 AM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com
Andrew,
  In my effort to keep my response concise I didn't go into details since I never assumed your intention was to infinitely extend the horn to be applicable,  but only extending it to a  "reasonable" length is what your question was referring to. So yes, extending a horn while keeping the same flare angle increases the aperture and can increase gain—but only up to the point where aperture efficiency begins to fall due to excessive amplitude taper. Horns have an optimum length for a given flare angle. Beyond that, gain increases only slowly or even decreases and so the more detailed explanations of the theoretical implications as have been provided are thus accurate.

Adrian

You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/sara-list/mnqQuf-kpn8/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to sara-list+...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/adb63a6e-bed8-4610-a4a4-5b894e676190n%40googlegroups.com.


--

Adrian

"My God, it's full of stars!"
 Dave Bowman

andrew....@googlemail.com

unread,
May 26, 2026, 12:32:16 PM (6 days ago) May 26
to sara...@googlegroups.com

Hi Adrian,

I appreciated your concise responses! Easier to understand.

I didn’t understand what I was asking so my questions developed as I got more information back – and I asked for mor information as a result.

Andy

On Saturday, May 23, 2026 at 4:58:13PM UTC-6 Stephen Arbogast wrote:

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages