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#1
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I am thinking of making a 2 meter J-Pole from 3/4 or 5/8 copper pipe.
Most plans that I can find on the web call for a 58 inch main leg and a 20 inch support below, making the antenna 78 inches or so in height. I want to install it in my attic where I have 66 inches of clear space. Can I cut the lower support leg down to 8 inches without a major impact on the performance of the antenna? |
#2
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![]() "ai8o" wrote in message ... I am thinking of making a 2 meter J-Pole from 3/4 or 5/8 copper pipe. Most plans that I can find on the web call for a 58 inch main leg and a 20 inch support below, making the antenna 78 inches or so in height. I want to install it in my attic where I have 66 inches of clear space. Can I cut the lower support leg down to 8 inches without a major impact on the performance of the antenna? course you can, make it from 300 ohm ribbon feeder & hang it via the top, I did that with a slim jim which may be better than a j pole, just google slim jim for 2 m if you don' recognise it |
#3
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#5
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In message , Owen Duffy
writes ai8o wrote in news:1bcefed7-a087-4fda-976d- : I am thinking of making a 2 meter J-Pole from 3/4 or 5/8 copper pipe. Most plans that I can find on the web call for a 58 inch main leg and a 20 inch support below, making the antenna 78 inches or so in height. I want to install it in my attic where I have 66 inches of clear space. Can I cut the lower support leg down to 8 inches without a major impact on the performance of the antenna? End fed antennas are an implementation risk. What's an 'implementation risk'? Have you considered a vertical dipole hung from the roof structure, and taking the feedline away horizontally for a couple of wavelengths, then down. You could make it a folded dipole (TV ribbon?) and use a half wave coax balun. Are you suggesting that a centre-fed dipole is better than a J-Pole? There is absolutely no problem with the J-Pole / Slim Jim type of antenna, or with feeding it. -- Ian |
#6
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On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 08:22:52 +0000, Ian Jackson
wrote: End fed antennas are an implementation risk. What's an 'implementation risk'? Having it come out mismatched, a very much higher probability. Have you considered a vertical dipole hung from the roof structure, and taking the feedline away horizontally for a couple of wavelengths, then down. You could make it a folded dipole (TV ribbon?) and use a half wave coax balun. Are you suggesting that a centre-fed dipole is better than a J-Pole? A center fed dipole is simpler to tune and keep tuned. There is absolutely no problem with the J-Pole / Slim Jim type of antenna, or with feeding it. The majority of users who come here for solutions to theirs would suggest otherwise. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#7
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Ian Jackson wrote in
: In message , Owen Duffy writes .... End fed antennas are an implementation risk. What's an 'implementation risk'? We will see if the OP, like so many who implement J poles in the roof space, becomes aware of problems and comes back for advice on how to solve them. The commonest problem is that VSWR doesn't meet expectations, but that it is the most mentioned problem speaks more of the visibility of VSWR that that it is the greatest problem with the J Pole. Like many if not most end fed antennas, the J Pole does little to deal with the common mode current that must flow on the feed system / support structure. Explanations of how they work usually deny the issue. But for all their faults, they spray RF around, and people would foolish to deny that they 'work' to some extent. When you look at the strengths and weaknesses of a J Pole, they are not a good choice IMHO for in-roof-space deployment. Owen |
#8
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On Mar 16, 5:57*pm, ai8o wrote:
I am thinking of making a 2 meter J-Pole from 3/4 or 5/8 copper pipe. Most plans that I can find on the web call for a 58 inch main leg and a 20 inch support below, making the antenna 78 inches or so in height. I want to install it in my attic where I have 66 inches of clear space. Can I cut the lower support leg down to 8 inches without a major impact on the performance of the antenna? Sure leave it off altogether and hang it with fishing line. Jimmie |
#9
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On 3/16/2010 5:57 PM, ai8o wrote:
I am thinking of making a 2 meter J-Pole from 3/4 or 5/8 copper pipe. Most plans that I can find on the web call for a 58 inch main leg and a 20 inch support below, making the antenna 78 inches or so in height. I want to install it in my attic where I have 66 inches of clear space. Can I cut the lower support leg down to 8 inches without a major impact on the performance of the antenna? The support leg is just that a leg. You can make it any length that works for you. John W3JXP |
#10
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John Passaneau wrote:
The support leg is just that a leg. You can make it any length that works for you. John W3JXP A J pole, or ground plane for that matter, couples into the support structure and outside of the feedline, making those conductors part of the radiating system. This alters the radiation pattern and can result in further coupling to anything near the support structure or feedline. The amount of coupling can be anything from insignificantly small to very large -- with the support and/or feedline radiating more than the "antenna" --, depending on the length and orientation of the entire conductive path to Earth ground. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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