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![]() "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 steel 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. Ed, I have been thinking of a self-supporting whip, too and I am also going to try big PVC, which is pretty rigid per unit length. I think adjacent sizes would fit smaller-into-larger with two or four slots several inches long cut into the larger pipe. Your application might use two sections of, say, 1 1/2-inch PVC pipe, each 7 1/2 feet long and a shorter coupling piece of 1 1/4-inch PVC pipe where they butt together. The large pieces would have linear slots cut into them, with hose clamps on each side of the coupling. (Lest anyone think I was neglecting pipe couplings that are made for PVC -- no -- I just don't think they'd be very strong.) This is all theoretical, mind you, as I have yet to put any pipe together, myself. I have already thought of several variants, including: (a) using a coupling piece larger than the two 7 1/2 foot sections, rather than smaller and (b) making the lower 7 1/2 foot section larger than the upper one, slotting just the lower one and thus omitting the coupling piece. PVC has the advantage of having numerous adapter/reducer combinations to get you to a suitable fitting for the base of your intended stainless steel whip top section. Question: What would you gain with copper tubing inside your lower PVC sections. Slight BW increase, perhaps? It seems to me that it creates an attachment problem, compared to just dropping a single conductor down from the stainless steel whip, through the center of the PVC and out to the tuner attachment. Speaking of that, including a PVC T-connector in the lower section, perhaps a few feet off the ground, would give you an exit point for the radiating element, but it would probably louse up the process of storing the whole thing inside your 8 foot PVC tube (whose diameter is not given). "Sal" |
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