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I Built the 10m Sleeve Antenna
Sal M. Onella wrote:
"Jimmie D" wrote in message ... "Owen Duffy" wrote in message snip The key to success with coaxial dipoles is decoupling the feedline. A common configuration is to place a set of radials, or a quarter wave choke to be effective a quarter wave below the bottom of the dipole lower element... this actually attempts to reduce current below the radials, and uses the quarter wave of feedline above the radials as part of the radiator for a little more gain. IIRC, the ARRL had some suggestions about decoupling a coaxial dipole. Owen I was thinking it might be interesting to make a ferrite choke that you can slide on the coax to tune the antenna. You might not have to slide the whole choke just a bead or two that you can move a few inches. Jimmie. This is worth trying, too and I had thought of it. Too bad I don't what type ferrite material I have (all junk-box recoveries, swap meet, etc). I figured on a low probability of success, but with failure so cheap, quick and easy -- what the heck!. ;-) I have pressed material which was not suppose to work, into working. I have used type 26 material effectively at 10 meters and above, meaning 20, 40, 80, 160m. (sucks on 6m though :( ) If there is a will, there is a way. May not be the most efficient--but ya' can make it work! An inductance meter is a crucial tool, but you can get the plans for one on the net which will use your fet-vom or vtvm and get ya' by! JS JS |
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