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Old January 23rd 05, 12:25 AM
W9DMK
 
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On Sat, 22 Jan 2005 17:49:33 -0600, "Ken Bessler"
wrote:

"W9DMK (Robert Lay)" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 22 Jan 2005 17:07:18 -0600, "Ken Bessler"
wrote:

"W9DMK (Robert Lay)" wrote in message
...


Dear Ken,

Then I'm going to suggest that which was my first thought - something
has probably been damaged by lightning, and it will probably require
that you take everything down and examine it inch by inch to find what
has happened. Be especially observent over the entire length of coax
for any sign of a burn.

I have had several strikes over the years that have caused varying
amounts of damage. Often, it is just a small burn through from the
inner conductor to the shield that leaves a lump of charred dielectric
at the point where it left the feed line and found some shorter path
to ground.


Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA


Thanks, Bob but lightning was not in the area or even in the state.
My HF rig was physically damaged by a falling branch sweeping
past the window where some of my coax lines went out.

The coax cables I'm using were not affected nor were the antennas.
The ice storm had already broken the support ropes and those
antennas were on the ground when the branches came down.

I deliberatly incorporate a physical weak spot in the support ropes
so that the antenna will survive in case of a snag.

The 2:1 SWR range on 40m was 303 kc before. Now it's 465 kc.


Dear Ken,

If I may be permitted another guess. When you check the bandwidth on
the higher bands, you probably do not see as much of an increase from
the original characterstics. If so, then there is another mechanism
that may have come into play. It does not take much of a droop on the
ends of a lower frequency antenna, center supported antenna to give an
effect of greater bandwidth. For example, I believe that you will
generally find that an inverted vee antenna has a wider bandwidth than
one that is near flat across the top (given that the center of each is
at same height above ground. If your antennas are center supported and
have a lower altitude at the ends than originally, that might account
for it. Unfortunately, your description of your antennas sounds more
like they are not center supported. As a general rule, as you surely
know, anything that increases the losses in an antenna will manifest
itself as greater bandwidth. That is the aspect that makes you really
want to find the cause, because it means something is eating your
watts.

With that I'm out of ideas.
Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA
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