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i would go with 3 8' pieces of aluminum tubing telescoped. probably 5/8",
1/2", and 3/8". for temporary fixed operation that would be plenty strong enough and would easily pack in a small tube. joints are easy to make with a hacksaw and hose clamps and can easily be tuned by loosening a clamp and sliding the joint a bit. "Ed" wrote in message . 192.196... I wish to build a 23 foot whip antenna similar to the Shakespeare 393 HF marine antenna, ( quite pricey ). It must be in three 7 1/2 foot long sections and screws together, as shown he http://shakespeare- marine.com/antennas.asp?antenna=393 I'm thinking along the lines of a 7 1/2 foot stainless steele whip on top of two 7 1/2 foot long segments of my own construction. At present, I think the two bottom sections would be copper tubing, enclosed within PVC pipe. Although I have some ideas for the connections, I would like to hear from others their ideas on both the building of two stiffer bottom sections for this whip, along with ways of fabricating the screw-together connections that would be both electrically sound and sturdy. The whip will be for fixed mobile operation at a motorhome. The entire assembly must break down and fit within a larger 8 foot long PVC tube for storage. I realize I could go with telescoping aluminum tubing, but I prefer something more elegant, such as this marine antenna. Ed K7AAT |
#2
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![]() i would go with 3 8' pieces of aluminum tubing telescoped. probably 5/8", 1/2", and 3/8". for temporary fixed operation that would be plenty strong enough and would easily pack in a small tube. joints are easy to make with a hacksaw and hose clamps and can easily be tuned by loosening a clamp and sliding the joint a bit. Dave, That's probably the sane way to do it. I really wanted a Shakespeare marine antenn clone, but the costs, or the labor involved is definitely more than just doing the aluminum tubing thing. Thanks. Ed |
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