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Old September 27th 04, 09:08 PM
Dave Platt
 
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In article ,
Angelo Guarino wrote:

I wish to hoist an antenna up a sailboat mast on a halyard to help
receive TV stations when out in the Chesapeake Bay. The challenge is
that the boat will rotate at anchor with the wind and even turn the
antanna on it's axis as it it "hoisted" by rope and not locked
rotationally.

There are commercially available antennas .. but it looks to me that
it's simply a "fat" folded dipole. I would think that I could
construct it's equivalent using the basic homemade folded dipole
approach.

http://www.boatenna.com/framesample1_000002.htm

Any other suggestions for a do-it-yourself antenna? It's not often
that I want to watch TV when on the boat (i.e. the reason I'm out
there) so I was hoping to build something myself out of thick guage
wire and 300ohm antenna wire.

Would 2 stacked folded dipoles with a 90deg offset (and "X") be an
effective approach?


That would work - it's a "turnstile" configuration.

Another fairly common approach is to build a 300-ohm folded dipole,
and then bend the dipole into an "S" shape. This gives it a fairly
omnidirectional pattern, eliminating the null-off-the-end of a
straight dipole. You could probably build one of these out of
heavy-gauge copper or aluminum wire.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
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