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On Feb 2, 11:14 am, Joaquin Tall
wrote: Hello All, I have just gotten my tech license and am eager to get my station up and running. I am starting on a shoestring; currently, I have no equipment whatsoever and don't know what I should buy just yet. In absence of a rig, I am now studying to pass my General license exam next month. I am very interested in building my own HF/VHF/UHF antennas. I've seen the ARRL books, but I was hoping that you good folks might have some favorite websites, book titles or magazine issues [old or new] that you'd be willing to pass along that could get me started. Many thanks for taking the time to respond! After you thrash your way through the ARRL Antenna book (which includes a CD with the entire searchable text.. very handy, as well as some useful planning programs like HFTA)... Another book that is quite useful are ON4UN's Low Band DXing... yes, the focus is on 40m and down, but there's lots of good construction info, as well as matching networks, etc. And, finally, I think everyone who's seriously fooling with antennas should get a copy of J. Kraus, "Antennas". This is a standard textbook on the subject, and I find it much more accessible than, say, Balanis, although the theoreticians tend to prefer Balanis, because of the rigor. Finally, if you need math stuff for antennas.. Sophocles Orfanidis at Rutgers has an online electromagnetics and antennas textbook that I find very handy (because it's online, and you can download the pdfs and carry it with you on your laptop)... http://www.ece.rutgers.edu/ ~orfanidi/ewa/ Orfanidis also has a bunch of very useful Matlab (or Octave) routines as an appendix to the book. Jim, W6RMK |