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The RFI is probably due to the fact that your antenna is so close to the
affected equipment. I used to make the bathroom flourescent light go on with my attic dipole. A trap design will have its current nodes in different places than a simple dipole, but if it is working, the field strength in the house will be the same. The ARRL antenna book should show you where to tune the traps. Alternativly: If your tuner (via balanced line, NOT coax) would not tune the antenna on multi bands, try making it into a loop. Follow around the house with the largest size you can. Just staple the wire to the rafters. Don't worry if your tuner does not have a balanced output, with the loop it won't make much difference. The "balun" in the tuner would just add losses. My roof has shingles made from Steel Slag, not gravel. I suspect it has a much different RF charectaristic than the stone shingles do. KA9CAR John "Bill" wrote in message . .. Yes, I agree. I have used open wire dipoles and they work great over all bands. But, my problem is constrained by wife and housing subdivision requirements. So my antenna is confined to the attic. I tried to use a short version of the open wire dipole and it is not loading at all and the RFI is everywhere. So I guess traps are my only option at this point. I just never built one before or had experience with coaxial type traps either. Just need to know where to tune the traps for maximum impedance on the band of operation. Your explanation of pruning makes sense. Thanks for your reply 73, Bill "WB3FUP (Mike Hall)" wrote in message ... When building a Trap dipole you start by building from the inside out. Lets say you want an dipole for 20 and 40. Cut a twenty meter dipole, hang it up and adjust it for minimum SWR. Then add the traps and balance of the antenna. You will obtain some loading from the coils in the traps so the 40 meter antenna will be somewhat shorter than you would expect. Prune for operation on 40 meters. The problem with traps is that you need a set for each band you want to work. You can't sneak by on the odd multiple halfwave, the traps might be at a bad place on that 20/40 antenna used on 15. I have a great example of that on a trapped dipole I loaded on 12 to try the band out.. I regret the years wasted with coaxial fed dipoles. Life is much easier if you hang as much wire as you can, as high as you can get it, and feed with ladder line. I work all 80 through 10 with a 68' (34' a side) dipole fed with 460 ohm ladder line. For portable use I have 75 feet of AWG#22 speaker wire. 34" is split and forms the doublet, the rest is the transmission line. It is usable from 80 to 10 and works great. -- 73 es cul wb3fup a Salty Bear "Bill" wrote in message ... Anybody tried to build this trap antenna yet? http://www.nerc.com/~jdegood/coaxtrap/ http://members.shaw.ca/ve6yp/ http://members.fortunecity.com/xe1bef/hf-antennas.htm Need some help on where to tune the traps for the bands of operation, and pruning the connection wiring. Can this be done with out a major test equipment investment? |
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