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" wrote in message m... 2 other considerations - 1) copper tubeing is quite soft-- got birds? a pigeon, or even lighter birds will tend to bend the elements. But, - 2) even with 6061 T, /6063 T (which is relatively hard drawn tubeing), at the lenghts required for 6 meter yagis (aprox 55 inch on EACH side of the boom), in wind even light by nevada standards ( like in Portland, Oregon), "whistle" (resonate at audio frequencies), and because they VIBRATE at an audible rate even in slight winds (have friend he and me bought 1/2 each of a 6 meter 4 el X 8 yagi moonbounce array- I used mine for makeing 2 meter antenas, the other guy put 4 stacked up on a 30 foot pole-- this number of years ago. Almost immediately, the elements started BREAKING from Metal Fatigue!! Perhaps, as M2, and several others have discouvered , elements that are SOLID 1/4 inch, inserted into 3/8 inch alumium tubeing seem to hold up, while these (1/4, or 3/16) elements thru the boom Break off right where they pass thru the boom, or are anchored by a screw! There are other considerations for antennas than Gain Like Weight, Metal Fatigue, oxydation , dissimilar metals (electrolysis). That it works for a day is one thing good for a LIFETIME-- thats another story altogether!! Jim NN7K I have had a light duty KLM 7 el 6m beam up for 20 years. During this time it survived a 96 mph storm that felled trees all around it. Never heard any vibration from it, but that may be because I braced the boom to the mast with two 5 foot lengths of 3/8 Al. Had it been copper, and it was still up, it would look like hell. I don't think hardware store Al would be a problem on 6m elements. What you don't want to do is to make a big hole in it for the mounting screw. Tam/WB2TT |
Gluing a piece of clothes line inside the elements on the 6 meter beam will
dampen the vibrations. End caps solve the "whistling in the dark" syndrome. Phil, KB2HQ " wrote in message m... 2 other considerations - 1) copper tubeing is quite soft-- got birds? a pigeon, or even lighter birds will tend to bend the elements. But, - 2) even with 6061 T, /6063 T (which is relatively hard drawn tubeing), at the lenghts required for 6 meter yagis (aprox 55 inch on EACH side of the boom), in wind even light by nevada standards ( like in Portland, Oregon), "whistle" (resonate at audio frequencies), and because they VIBRATE at an audible rate even in slight winds (have friend he and me bought 1/2 each of a 6 meter 4 el X 8 yagi moonbounce array- I used mine for makeing 2 meter antenas, the other guy put 4 stacked up on a 30 foot pole-- this number of years ago. Almost immediately, the elements started BREAKING from Metal Fatigue!! Perhaps, as M2, and several others have discouvered , elements that are SOLID 1/4 inch, inserted into 3/8 inch alumium tubeing seem to hold up, while these (1/4, or 3/16) elements thru the boom Break off right where they pass thru the boom, or are anchored by a screw! There are other considerations for antennas than Gain Like Weight, Metal Fatigue, oxydation , dissimilar metals (electrolysis). That it works for a day is one thing good for a LIFETIME-- thats another story altogether!! Jim NN7K "Larry Gauthier (K8UT)" wrote in message ... My local "Do It Center" hardware store has started carrying 6 foot lengths of T6061 aluminum tubing in 1/16 inch diameter increments up to about 3/4". For general experimentation and short elements, those might work out for you. For more serious work you should probably order from a place like Texas Towers. -- -larry K8UT "PDRUNEN" wrote in message ... Hi Group, Where can I get some good grade material for a 6 meter beam elements? Does a hardware store such as Lowes carry anything that would work for the elements? Beam size is 4 to 6 elements. de KJ4UO |
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