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I saw the following antenna being made by some ultralight guys in San Diego.
I was wondering what to think of this. I am new to antennas and just starting down the path to hamdom. Anything I need to know before starting to experiment with making one? I don't want to fry my only radio, a Vertex Standard VX-700. Below are the plans for an antenna which does not require a ground plane. This antenna is a 1/2 wave vertical dipole made out of RG-58/U coax and a Radio shack FM radio antenna. The beauty of this design is that it is cheap, simple, and easy to make with readily available materials. The radiator should be 3', 9 1/2 inches long for 123.450 operation, but only the top foot or two needs to be the telescoping FM radio antenna. Or, you can make the entire radiator length out of regular antenna wire if you wish. The only critical thing is the total length. Start out with enough coax so that you will have enough to run up to the radio from your antenna mounting location. First, solder the telescoping antenna to the middle conductor on the coax. Make sure to strip back the shield far enough so that it does not short to the "radiator" or telescoping part of the antenna. Remember, you can make the "radiator" entirely out of the center conductor on the coax, so if you are going to do that, you must make sure the dimensions are correct. Next, on the other end of the coax, I cut off a piece of coax that is going to be the shorting stub. In all cases, I always make the lengths to the long side. This way the antenna can be trimmed in to the desired frequency with a SWR bridge. To connect the shorting stub to the feedline, carefully remove a small section of insulation from the center conductor (no more than 1/4 of an inch). Solder and tape the inner conductor, then join and solder the shields. To insure proper shielding, split a spare piece of braid lengthwise on top of the shield connection, and carefully solder the shield together. (Rather than disecting the coax cable and soldering, we used a BNC connector for the shorting stub. We then trimed back for tuning and ended up with almost no wire needed on the shorting stub. VERY SHORT.) Don't forget to put a BNC connector on the radio end. Finally, hang up your antenna in an open space, and tune it in with a SWR meter. I have found that adjusting the length of the shorting stub has the most affect in adjusting for minimum SWR but be careful. If you cut too much off you will have to re-do it. Radiator Length: 3' 9.5" Radiator to shorting stub: 12.9" Shorting Stub: 1.9" (imagine no BNC connector when measuring) QUESTIONS: (1) So how do I calculate lengths for other frequencies? ie 121.5MHz, 146.73MHZ, 123.0 MHz (2) Any chance of damaging my Vertex Standard VX-700 if I start playing around with this? (3) Where can I finde a descent but cheap SWR meter? Thanks, Carl |
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