On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 08:49:49 -0700, Jim Lux
wrote:
I've fooled around a lot with various "throw the wire on the roof"
situations (out of laziness, more than anything), and, in general, it
seems to work better (no quantititive results) when it looks more like a
fan dipole (feedpoint in the middle-ish) than a loop (feedpoint on the
edge).
My original post was to generate topics on the antenna design and/or
equivalent or better stealth alternatives. I don't really need to
drop the wire, but that too is a good idea.
As for the 'fan dipole' you like, I have been using the horizontal
version throughout my 30 years of ham radio. I learned about the
two-wire version as a novice when I was first licensed. 80 meters cut
for the Novice frequencies also doubled as a 10 meter dipole. 40
meters cut at the lower end of the Novice frequencies doubled as a 15
meter antenna.
As a General Class operator, I discovered I not only had to add an
element for 20 meters, but the 75 meter dipole didn't work on 10 and
the 40 meter dipole didn't work on 15 meters ??? Then I learned about
where the harmonics fell.
By the time I became Advanced class, we had three new WARC bands.
Along with 75, 80, 40, 30, 20, 17, 15, 12, & 10 meters comes 9 wires
or an antenna tuner. I never did like antenna tuners. I always
wanted one antenna to do it all. It is amazing how quickly I fell in
love with my tuner, though, when I hung a 130 foot dipole about 100
feet high center fed with 300 ohm twin lead. I learned to tune the
antenna almost as quickly as I could throw an antenna switch a couple
of times.
Now that auto-tuners are about as inexpensive as the manual tuners, I
am awfully tempted to wander over to the SGC shelf at one of the ham
stores and try it out.
I am moving to a new house soon. We will be restricted in antennas
only to the extent that we don't make the yard look too ugly. It
isn't terribly well suited for many antennas, but I do hope to put up
at least one decent fan-dipole, more accurately parallel dipole. I
don't think I can fit a full-wave loop, due to lack of supports, but
it looks like I'll have a place outside my window where a row of trees
can support a 60 foot or so high dipole.... I still have a 100 foot
roll of 300 or 450 ohm window line
I guess I digressed.
73 for now
Buck
N4PGW
--
73 for now
Buck, N4PGW
www.lumpuckeroo.com
"Small - broadband - efficient: pick any two."