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"professorpaul" wrote in message
... On Aug 7, 5:03 pm, Cecil Moore wrote: Helmut Wabnig wrote: The LPDA is "self-adjusting" and easy to make. And you may change frequency any time. Question is: Why would an amateur radio operator want to cover 148 MHz to 420 MHz with a transmitting antenna? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com I only want to cover 144 and 420, nothing in between! Just for LEO satellites, where the uplink is on 144 and the downlink is 420, or vis versa. /paul W3FIS I have an ELK and it works on those frequencies out of the box without any tuning. The 5 element ELK has the same performance as Cushcraft 2/70 beam it replaced. The Cushcraft was essentially two separate 3 element Yagis (6 elements) with a splitter harness to feed the two. You say you only want to work 2 specific frequencies, but for the Yagi you will have to make adjustments because most that are pre-tuned, are optimized for 146-148 on 2 meters. Also, very few hams are content to stay on one frequency. There is so much to do and experiment with. ELK actually performs as a beam from 144 Mhz multi-mode action to far flung NOAA WX stations at 162 Mhz. ELK works at both ends of 2 meters without tuning. It is also lightweight, portable and takedown and assembly is quick and easy. The downside is that you need to use lockwashers on the elements and glue the tips or they will work loose in the wind. Mine has been up for 5 years and I added a bell crank/pulley and cord running to the base of the mast to change polarization. The upper limit of gain for a Log-Periodic is about 10db. A 3 element Yagi is about 7db and a 5 element is about 9 db. You have to go to a long boom to exceed 10 db with a Yagi. There have been several LPDA construction articles in QST over the years, and there are a few on the Internet too. One that looked interesting, used angle stock bolted together with Nylon hardware for the boom/feeder, and another that used parallel Copper tubes with the coax routed from the rear through one of the tubes for the front feed point. One real big plus is that you can get Brass and Aluminum tubing and rod in numerous hobby shops and hardware stores stock sizes that are just too short for 1/2 wave on 2 meters. |
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