Thread: Antenna design
View Single Post
  #9   Report Post  
Old October 18th 04, 01:36 PM
dxAce
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Michael Lawson wrote:

"starman" wrote in message
...
Pierre Vachon wrote:

Hi there, I am trying to build a longwire antenna for use in the

20 meter
band to 70 meter band area. I was looking for advice on what

materials to
use for the antenna and the lead in lines. I will hook it up to a

Drake r8B
radio. What is the minimum height it has to be? Where to ground

it?.
Actually, does it have to be grounded if the radio is grounded at

the
outlet?

I am a little limited in space as my yard is only 75 feet long and

there are
power lines at the front. I assume that they are the source of an

irritating
hum on the receiver on certain frequencies.

Thanks for the help in advance.

Pierre


A real longwire antenna is much longer than what you are thinking of
building. The antenna you describe is called a 'random wire' or
inverted-L. This kind of antenna is not tuned for a specific band or
range of frequencies. In fact, it performs well throughout the

shortwave
spectrum. See the following website for instructions on building a

good
low noise inverted-L antenna. I use this kind with my R8B.

http://www.anarc.org/naswa/badx/ante...e_antenna.html


Hmm. That brings up a question that I'd thought of earlier, but
when I was writing my posts, I forgot to put it in.

How do you figure out the impedance of various random
wires of different gauges?? John Doty's article mentioned
an 18 gauge wire hung more than a few feet above the
ground, but I'm just curious what sort of differences there
would be using, say, 14, 16 or 22 gauge wire in a similar
scenario. I can't imagine trying to test it without a load of
some sort.


Don't worry about it. The gauge of the wire will have an extremly minimal
effect, and besides, there are so many other variables as well.

dxAce
Michigan
USA

http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm