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I'm mulling the construction of a "nested HF squalos" antenna. At
least three bands, wires for 20, 15 and 10M in a coplanar arrangement on four fiberglass spreaders. Basically a multiband cubical quad driven element with a common feedpoint, single feedline and flopped over into the horizontal position. After wading thru all the modeling comes the real world. I'll cut the wires a bit longer than modeling indicates and start manually tuning the thing to resonance by nipping all the wires a bit at a time using the 259B, etc. Each nip will affect the resonant points of all the wires due to the interactions amongst the wires. The question: Which wire should I start tuning first? I've seen posts which state that one should start nipping from the lowest band to the highest band and I've seen recommendations to start with the highest band and work down to the lowest band. Which way is it?? Tnx, w3rv |
#2
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Cecil Moore wrote in message ...
Richard Clark wrote: Common advice I've seen is work with the most wire first. Common advice using common sense. An 80m dipole can be close to resonance on 10m (big effect) but a 10m dipole is completely non-resonant on 80m (virtually no effect). And a 5% adjustment to an 80m length equates to a 40% adjustment to a 10m length. Been there, just did it to a Field Day G5RV . . Uggg . . "Tack some wire back on it." In mathematical terms, tuning the shortest wavelength antenna first is a *diverging* infinite series, good for sun tans but bad for ham operating time. Richard:Cecil: Makes sense, bottoms up! Tnx. w3rv |
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