"Reg Edwards" wrote in message
...
I have a home brew Carolina Windom that I have pruned for 80 meters.
I
have compared it with a G5RV and a full size inverted V for 80
meters. I
like to chase 80 meter DX and I am in Southern California. The
Windom
gets much better reports than the G5RV on both 80 & 40 those are the
only
bands I checked and I can find little difference between it and the
full
size inverted V. Some times the inverted V will be better by one s
unit
then the Windom will be but for DX the Windom always seems better
and I
get very good reports out of the Pacific. I think different
antennas work
differently at each QTH and only experimenting will reveal whats
best for
you.
==================================
If you rotate the directions of all the antennas you will get a
completely different set of results and draw a different set of
conclusions. Which is correct?
----
Reg.
The "correct" conclusion is the one that works for the individual proposing
the query.
I replaced a conventional 66' doublet with a Carolina Windom 40 LP. It was
put up in exactly the same place the doublet was. I immediately noticed that
I worked stations that I'd previously worked easier and their received sigs
were stronger as well. I also worked many stations that I'd not heard
before.
Does this mean the Windom is superior? No way! It just happened to work out
that way for my particular set of variables.
Don't forget, for every antenna you physically put up and actually yield
favorable results with, there will be a bunch of folks armed with an antenna
modeling program who will tell you why it can't work.
If it works for you, enjoy it. I'm going to try a full-wave loop next.
--
Vy 73 de Bert
WA2SI
FISTS #9384
QRP ARCI #11782
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