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Here's a challenge !
Having recently acquired a Yaesu FT-879 HF transceiver I'd like to use it for portable operation from my camper van. Ideally to take advantage of the improving HF conditions during my lunch hour at work. So I originally thought about buying a Yaesu ATAS-120A, but then I realised that I wasn't that interested in mobile operation. So I could consider something a bit more efficient. See the Outbacker antennas http://www.outbackerantennas.com/products.html . Some appear to meet your requirments. One of our club's hams used one at Field Day last year and this. (Outbacker 8, I think) He did as well as the guys who had much bigger antennas. He merely clamped it to a chain-link fence at head-level and he was on the air. The mass of your camper van might be OK if you can't park adjacent to a suitable fence or other structure. Downsides: Not cheap; band changes require your attendance at the antenna unless you switch among many of them. (You are quite wealthy, right? :-) Based on the tests I've seen, the Outbacker is a bit more efficient than Hamsticks (but not by much), and is probably less efficient than all but the smallest of screwdriver-type antennas (including the ATAS). If you're interested in a fairly traditional mobile-type antenna (an inductively-loaded short radiator) with higher efficiency, consider a bugcatcher - a lower mast, a large air-core center-loading inductor, and a long whip on top (possibly with a capacity hat). By winding the center coil properly (large-diameter wire or tubing, turns spaced apart, with the right length/diameter ratio) you can get a significantly higher Q in the coil (and thus lower losses) than you'll get with a tightly-wound screwdriver coil or a helically- wound Hamstick or Outbacker. You may want one coil per band... although it's possible to work multiple bands, with some additional loss, by using a jumper to short out some of the coil turns on the higher-frequency bands. I've seen some "dual-band" bugcatcher designs, in which the full coil is used to load the antenna on 75 meters, and a series-resonant circuit shorts out some of the turns on 40 meters. Mount the antenna as high as possible on the van... ideally, so that all of the antenna is up above the vehicle body. Since you don't plan to actually operate while driving, you can use a taller antenna than would be possible while mobile, and may not need additional guying. Another possibility is to simply throw up a random wire (perhaps an inverted-L, suspended via thin rope from nearby trees... use the vehicle body as a ground (perhaps with a counterpoise wire) and use a wide-range antenna tuner. Any reasonably thin, flexible stranded wire could be used... some specialist dealers such as The Wireman sell antenna wires which are reportedly easy to coil without kinking. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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