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Old June 2nd 11, 08:52 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jim Lux Jim Lux is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 801
Default Vertical on metal patio cover

On 6/2/2011 10:21 AM, Wayne wrote:
I'm looking into mounting a vertical (20 meters and higher freq) on a
new patio cover. The cover is made out of 6 inch by 16 foot aluminum
channels that interlock edge to edge across a 20 foot width. Each
section is powder coated (aka...."painted"), so the sections are most
likely not well connected electrically to each other.


I'll bet they're better connected than you think. Are there sheet metal
screws joining them? what's holding the strips to the frame? Can you put
a wire/foil tape under the screws. In any case, it would be easy to bond
the panels together with some short jumpers. I can think of a variety
of ways to do this, but one of the easiest might be a strip of copper
foil tape along the 20 foot length. Sand the powder coat away on a spot
on each "strip", run a stainless sheet metal screw through the copper
foil or braid and the aluminum. Then glop on something to seal it so it
doesn't corrode or leak. Butyl roof mastic might be a good thing.

A fancier way would be to get another aluminum strip and spot weld it.


I'm considering a 10 foot long H shaped metal structure lying on the
cover, with the antenna mounted in the center of the H. Radials are a
possible but not desired approach. Any other suggested methods of
mounting the antenna/etc.?


You need to seriously think about bonding the roof anyway, so that is
your best bet.

But, capacitively coupling from something lying on the surface would
also probably work fairly well. Wide aluminum flashing laid out from
your antenna base across the top of your corrugations (bend it to fit
the ridges) and glued down might work pretty well.

If you had, say, 1 foot wide by 10 feet long, and it's 1/8" max
distance, that's like a capacitor of about 500pF. Put a couple or three
of those strips and you're doing pretty well. For your frequencies,
it's like it's actually physically connected.



--Wayne W5GIE