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Old May 25th 05, 02:00 PM
Buck
 
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2. There is about 100 ft between two unit chimneys. As no antennas
are allowed, however there is a satellite dish at every turn, I would
need to be super stealth and get permission from the neighbors that own
the other chimney (good luck on that), but I could put a dipole between
the two chimneys.

I have looked into a vertical, but I have no room for radials. My
patio is 6 ft deep and maybe 10 ft long.

Any suggestions?

73
Greg
ki4bbl


Gregg,

AL7KT, a friend of mine lives in an apartment that forbids antennas.
He has a loop antenna for 80 meters on his roof that goes around four
chimneys. The wire lays on the roof and 300 ohm TV twinlead (low-loss
from rat-shack) comes down the corner and is painted the color of the
apartments. His antenna accidentally fits on 80 meters and dips below
1.5:1 on all but two bands, one WARC. He uses the internal tuner on
his Kenwood TS-440SAT and operates where ever his privileges allow.

His concern is that the wire is literally ON the roof and that instead
of being flat, it has the two inverted vee shapes on the two sides.
The wire is number 14, but it is black and disappears against the dark
gray shingles on the roof. Unless you are looking for it, the 300 ohm
twin lead just disappears due to being painted like the building.

The antenna mostly works well. In only three conversations, his loop
outperformed my 80 and 40 meter sloping dipole hands down, but on 20
meters I was making contacts he couldn't even hear, but then my 20
meter dipole is about 75 feet or so high with one leg slanted upwards
by about 60 degrees or so from there. We live about 10 miles or so in
a crows flight and could barely hear each other on 20 meters. The
little time we spent comparing signals could not be mistaken for being
a valid comparison of antennas, but it did prove his antenna worked.

If you can support and hide your coax from the feed point, you can
consider using magnet wire for the dipole. The wire stretched between
the two chimneys would otherwise go unnoticed. If you need more
strength, you may be able to find some insulated small gauge wire, 18
or smaller, where the color blends into the background and yet the
wire will withstand a little more abuse.

If nothing else, I hope what I said help you get your wheels turning
towards finding you a solution. Good luck


--
73 for now
Buck
N4PGW