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#1
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Hi folks:
I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD |
#2
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Hi folks: I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD My $0.02 worth - I would go to the nearest electrical supply store and purchase 13 ga copper stranded wire with a plastic coating and a small piece of either plastic or rubber tubing and slide the antenna wire into the tubing only enough to where you need to run the whole assy thru the pulley. The 13 ga wire is stronger than the RS wire and the outside covering should withstand the abrasiveness of the pulley! 73's de Howard W3CQH |
#3
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On Jul 20, 12:04 pm, "John Doe" wrote:
wrote in message ups.com... Hi folks: I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD My $0.02 worth - I would go to the nearest electrical supply store and purchase 13 ga copper stranded wire with a plastic coating and a small piece of either plastic or rubber tubing and slide the antenna wire into the tubing only enough to where you need to run the whole assy thru the pulley. The 13 ga wire is stronger than the RS wire and the outside covering should withstand the abrasiveness of the pulley! 73's de Howard W3CQH Thanks Howard. Does the plastic coating affect the signal at all? Clark |
#4
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... On Jul 20, 12:04 pm, "John Doe" wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Clark KB9SJD My $0.02 worth - I would go to the nearest electrical supply store and purchase 13 ga copper stranded wire with a plastic coating and a small piece of either plastic or rubber tubing and slide the antenna wire into the tubing only enough to where you need to run the whole assy thru the pulley. The 13 ga wire is stronger than the RS wire and the outside covering should withstand the abrasiveness of the pulley! 73's de Howard W3CQH Thanks Howard. Does the plastic coating affect the signal at all? Clark I don't know where the 13 wire comes from , but the most common will be either 12 or 14 in the US. Anyway the plastic or any other coating will have no noticable effect on the antenna as far as the signal. It will have a slight shortning effect on the length, but usually 20 meters or higher is where that shows up. The higher the frequency the more the effect shows up. Up to 10 meters, the standard formulars are still close enough for a starthing point. |
#5
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![]() "Ralph Mowery" wrote in message link.net... wrote in message oups.com... On Jul 20, 12:04 pm, "John Doe" wrote: wrote in message ups.com... Clark KB9SJD My $0.02 worth - I would go to the nearest electrical supply store and purchase 13 ga copper stranded wire with a plastic coating and a small piece of either plastic or rubber tubing and slide the antenna wire into the tubing only enough to where you need to run the whole assy thru the pulley. The 13 ga wire is stronger than the RS wire and the outside covering should withstand the abrasiveness of the pulley! 73's de Howard W3CQH Thanks Howard. Does the plastic coating affect the signal at all? Clark I don't know where the 13 wire comes from , but the most common will be either 12 or 14 in the US. Anyway the plastic or any other coating will have no noticable effect on the antenna as far as the signal. It will have a slight shortning effect on the length, but usually 20 meters or higher is where that shows up. The higher the frequency the more the effect shows up. Up to 10 meters, the standard formulars are still close enough for a starthing point. 13 ga copper stranded wire is also very common here in the USA... I am running 540 ft of it as a longwire (stealth Antenna) from 160m to 70cm - driving it with an Icom AH4 tuner... works like a champ... No the outer jacket should have no effect on your signal, you might have to trim the lengths of the dipole since you will be using a larger gauge wire... 73's de Howard W3CQH |
#6
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On Jul 20, 9:48 am, wrote:
Hi folks: I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD Hi. Closely examine the break. You can tell if it was caused by wear, flexing, or from chemical reaction with what is coming from the chimney you mentioned. What are you heating with? Gas and oil heat both create a small amount of sulfur containing acids going out the chimney. Also, are you using a pulley with a plastic wheel? A metal wheel, I forget the real name for it, will wear the wire. Good luck, Paul KD7HB |
#7
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On Jul 20, 12:19 pm, " wrote:
On Jul 20, 9:48 am, wrote: Hi folks: I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD Hi. Closely examine the break. You can tell if it was caused by wear, flexing, or from chemical reaction with what is coming from the chimney you mentioned. What are you heating with? Gas and oil heat both create a small amount of sulfur containing acids going out the chimney. Also, are you using a pulley with a plastic wheel? A metal wheel, I forget the real name for it, will wear the wire. Good luck, Paul KD7HB Thanks Paul. The chimney is no longer being used, so there's nothing happening there. I am using a metal pulley, but I'll look around for some sort of plastic one. Thanks for your suggestion. |
#8
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... On Jul 20, 12:19 pm, " wrote: On Jul 20, 9:48 am, wrote: Hi folks: I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD Hi. Closely examine the break. You can tell if it was caused by wear, flexing, or from chemical reaction with what is coming from the chimney you mentioned. What are you heating with? Gas and oil heat both create a small amount of sulfur containing acids going out the chimney. Also, are you using a pulley with a plastic wheel? A metal wheel, I forget the real name for it, will wear the wire. Good luck, Paul KD7HB Thanks Paul. The chimney is no longer being used, so there's nothing happening there. I am using a metal pulley, but I'll look around for some sort of plastic one. Thanks for your suggestion. They make plastic clothes line pulleys. About 2 or 3 inch diameter, which should minimize kinking of the wire. Tam/WB2TT |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Hi folks: I've got a 110' 80 meter dipole that I've used for the past 4 years. I have the dipole strung about 30' in the air and connected between two trees. Because of where the trees are and the location of my house, I've needed to use a pulley that's attached to my chimney to keep the dipole closer to my house. The pulley is located near the center of the antenna, and it creates about a 25 degree angle from the chimney to the other tree. Each year I have to repair the antenna wire right around where the pulley is. I'm guessing because I use a cheap antenna wire (purchased at Radio Shack ... about 14 gauge I believe), that's why my antenna keeps breaking. I don't see how the pulley's creating that much wear on the antenna, although I'm sure it's possible. Would you guess that I'd have better luck if I was to purchase a stronger antenna wire, such as a copper-clad steel wire I can get at Universal Radio? http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/wire.html Thanks for your suggestions. Clark KB9SJD I believe the pulley is the problem. Run a line from the chimney to one of the trees. run a line from the chimney to the other tree. run a short jumper wire (leave a little slack) at the chimney from one line to the other line. - and I would be very very tempted to stick a 20-foot pole out the top of that chimney to get the antenna a little higher. - my nickel's worth - at a 2-cent discount. |
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