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Dave[_18_] January 15th 09 02:05 PM

Vertical antenna for DX
 
Peter wrote:
I'm thinking of getting one of these for the roof:

http://www.eham.net/reviews/detail/315


That's my plan as the garage has a large surface area galvanized steel roof.


Peter VK6YSF

http://members.optushome.com.au/vk6ysf/vk6ysf/main.htm



The Titan DX doesn't require a ground screen of any kind. It has a
built-in counterpoise, and is center-fed.

Art Unwin January 15th 09 05:00 PM

Vertical antenna for DX
 
On Jan 15, 8:05*am, Dave wrote:
Peter wrote:
I'm thinking of getting one of these for the roof:


http://www.eham.net/reviews/detail/315


That's my plan as the garage has a large surface area galvanized steel roof.


Peter *VK6YSF


http://members.optushome.com.au/vk6ysf/vk6ysf/main.htm


The Titan DX doesn't require a ground screen of any kind. *It has a
built-in counterpoise, and is center-fed.


Are we talking counterpoise or are we talking load?
Art

Richard Clark January 15th 09 07:07 PM

Vertical antenna for DX
 
On Thu, 15 Jan 2009 09:00:14 -0800 (PST), Art Unwin
wrote:

On Jan 15, 8:05*am, Dave wrote:
counterpoise


Are we talking counterpoise or are we talking load?


If you are talking, wipe off the screen. I trimmed Dave's post to
reduce confusion - your alternative word, load, never appears.

In fact, we never conjoin the term garage and load, nor roof and load,
nor power lines and load. No, counterpoise has a well known and long
established meaning that has been found in a lot of texts and none of
the authors have ever felt the necessity to join that term with
garage, roof, or power line either.

Perhaps Newton kept his counterpoise in his garage - the historical
record is rather vague on this matter.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC

Dave[_18_] January 16th 09 02:34 PM

Vertical antenna for DX
 
Richard Clark wrote:
On Thu, 15 Jan 2009 09:00:14 -0800 (PST), Art Unwin
wrote:

On Jan 15, 8:05 am, Dave wrote:
counterpoise


Are we talking counterpoise or are we talking load?


If you are talking, wipe off the screen. I trimmed Dave's post to
reduce confusion - your alternative word, load, never appears.

In fact, we never conjoin the term garage and load, nor roof and load,
nor power lines and load. No, counterpoise has a well known and long
established meaning that has been found in a lot of texts and none of
the authors have ever felt the necessity to join that term with
garage, roof, or power line either.

Perhaps Newton kept his counterpoise in his garage - the historical
record is rather vague on this matter.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


It's a capacitor.

Richard Clark January 16th 09 07:36 PM

Vertical antenna for DX
 
On Fri, 16 Jan 2009 14:34:42 +0000, Dave wrote:

Perhaps Newton kept his counterpoise in his garage - the historical
record is rather vague on this matter.


It's a capacitor.


History informs us he would have called it a condenser, your word came
into the language later from Le Compte a'Citor, Gauss's French Pen-Pal
from junior high.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC

MTV January 17th 09 01:53 PM

Vertical antenna for DX
 
Richard Clark wrote:
On Fri, 16 Jan 2009 14:34:42 +0000, Dave wrote:

Perhaps Newton kept his counterpoise in his garage - the historical
record is rather vague on this matter.

It's a capacitor.


History informs us he would have called it a condenser, your word came
into the language later from Le Compte a'Citor, Gauss's French Pen-Pal
from junior high.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


Yep, they were all still 'condensers' when I got my first license in '57.

Old as dirt?

W5MTV


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