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Old January 13th 09, 12:33 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default Vertical antenna for DX

Larry Gauthier (K8UT) wrote:
My verticals are at the rear of the property and farthest away
from power lines and AC service to the house. The dipoles extend into the
front yard and are more susceptible to AC line noise. Although I also
expected the verticals to be "noisier", due to locations the dipoles are a
little - but barely - noisier than the verticals.


It certainly depends upon location. At my previous QTH,
the horizontal dipole was, on the average, 2 S-units
quieter than the 40m vertical. I tracked the noise to
a 30 foot ground wire running down a power pole.
--
73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com
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Old January 13th 09, 02:06 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default Vertical antenna for DX


"Cecil Moore" wrote in message
...
Larry Gauthier (K8UT) wrote:
My verticals are at the rear of the property and farthest away from power
lines and AC service to the house. The dipoles extend into the front yard
and are more susceptible to AC line noise. Although I also expected the
verticals to be "noisier", due to locations the dipoles are a little -
but barely - noisier than the verticals.


It certainly depends upon location. At my previous QTH,
the horizontal dipole was, on the average, 2 S-units
quieter than the 40m vertical. I tracked the noise to
a 30 foot ground wire running down a power pole.
--
73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com


Thanks for the comments, which confirms most of what beleive was the case.

The QTH is Northam in Western Australia, about 80km east from Perth. All
other major population centres are DX.

The nearest distribution transformer is about 250metre away as is the 22kV
HV feeder with only 240/415V low voltage in my street, therefore noise
should be low from this source.

The only thing to do is build it see!

Cheers
--
Peter VK6YSF



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Old January 13th 09, 05:12 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default Vertical antenna for DX

Cecil,

Please tell me any more information you may have about the ground wire
running down the power pole. I did the exact same thing here. I found
most of my noise was being generated by this ground wire 3 blocks from
my house. Were you able to do anything about it?

Michael

Cecil Moore wrote:
Larry Gauthier (K8UT) wrote:
My verticals are at the rear of the property and farthest away from
power lines and AC service to the house. The dipoles extend into the
front yard and are more susceptible to AC line noise. Although I also
expected the verticals to be "noisier", due to locations the dipoles
are a little - but barely - noisier than the verticals.


It certainly depends upon location. At my previous QTH,
the horizontal dipole was, on the average, 2 S-units
quieter than the 40m vertical. I tracked the noise to
a 30 foot ground wire running down a power pole.

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Old January 13th 09, 08:02 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default Vertical antenna for DX

On Jan 13, 11:12*am, Michael wrote:


It certainly depends upon location. At my previous QTH,
the horizontal dipole was, on the average, 2 S-units
quieter than the 40m vertical. I tracked the noise to
a 30 foot ground wire running down a power pole.


I would think that means a bad connection somewhere near
that point. Could be the wire connection to ground itself,
or a bad part somewhere near that area, and the ground
wire was just acting as an antenna extension to the bad
part. Many parts can develop bad or leaky connections and
start to cause noise. It was a bad end connector once when
I had to call the power co.
Make sure the ground wire is actually connected to ground
well, and if it still makes noise, try banging the power pole with a
sledgehammer while listening on a portable radio.
If the noise changes, it's fairly close in that area.
Or if you use a radio with a directional antenna, you might be
able to get fairly close.
Once you get that close, nothing to do except bug the power
company.

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