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Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 23 Aug 2006 02:18:21 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote: Apart from the challenge of making reliable connections to aluminium, are there other "issues" that come to mind in using such wire for antennas? Hi Owen, I've used ordinary house wiring for long-wires and they have survived 100# limb falls that ripped out my matching box from its post. The survival was with the wire, not the box. [warning to Reggie, the prose that follows contains literary allusions] What price tensile strength? The worst thing you can do is pull a wire tight in an attempt to totally eliminate sag. The inverse sine angle of its depression magnifies the stress by huge amounts. A slight sag will never yield a tensile failure in the most pedestrian of wire. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC As long as gravity exists will it ever be possible to get a perfectly horizontal dipole? In spite of a strong tensile component there will always be a vertical component due to gravity (with a centre feed there will also be the weight of any cable and perhaps a balun as well). The net effect is a sag called a catenary. Granted an infinite tension on the antenna wire would probably overcome the vertical component but the wire might not survive. The question for this relative neophyte is, what effect does the sag have on antenna performance? -- Paul S. Hinman - VE6LDS long West 113 deg 27 min 20 sec lat North 53 deg 27 min 3 sec Maidenhead Locator DO33gk |
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