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On 6/16/2012 3:21 PM, W5DXP wrote:
On Saturday, June 16, 2012 2:48:21 PM UTC-5, NM5K wrote: I guess that's why I'm such a coax fan... May not be good for multi- band use with a single dipole, but for single or limited band use, very hard to beat. Here's one that will beat most RG-8x fed dipoles. http://www.w5dxp.com/notuner.htm -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp I use 213 though... ![]() I can think of that should be as good. On paper, slightly less loss than the coax, but being I've never compared them side by side, I couldn't say if your method is actually superior enough to see a difference on a meter.. I've never tried your method of feeding. The physical aspects are not too convenient for me most of the time. In the case of the ladder line/tuner vs coax, the difference was small, but enough to notice a bit of difference on an S meter. Of course, I'm using received signals to judge. Things should be reciprocal, so I usually don't bother trying to do transmit tests as I consider it less reliable than quick A/B comparisons and my eyes on a meter. Good ladder line is generally less loss than good coax, but on the low bands, the loss per foot of good coax is pretty low. I would think the advantage to your system would increase as you rise in frequency. IE: at 50 Mhz, might be quite worthwhile.. Or if long runs are involved. When I ran ATV on 70 cm, I preferred TV twin lead over coax for the UHF TV antenna I used for receive. It had less loss than coax to a 4:1 TV balun. As long as it was dry.. Wet? Nearly useless... ![]() |
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