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It sounds like you have an older marine transceiver with built in
antenna coupler, which is not uncommon. A tech would install the radio and match the whip (non resonant) and random wire feeder by choosing coil taps and tweeking a cap for each channel. The channel selector will now select the correct coil/cap to match properly the antenna. If the radio or antenna is moved you must retune the network to match the antenna again. If this is the case here you would have to bypass the coupler section and remote it to make the radio happy feeding coaxial cable, probably a big project. Mike John - G0WPA wrote: Hi there, I have a marine MF (1 to 7 Mhz) transmitter with only an antenna "screw terminal" for a long wire connection on the back of the set, rather than an SO239 or N type, and the set itself being grounded with copper sheet to a decent earth. My problem is, I need to feed an MF whip on the roof, some 50 feet away, through the building, offices etc, and dont really want the EMC and Health and Safety problems that would arise from 400W PEP happily radiating indoors with the recommended wire lead-in. So I'll need to use a feeder. I have decent low-loss coax (LMR type) but how do I couple it to the set? ..and to the whip (just a long-ish wire in fiberglass) at the other end. Im thinking an unbalanced to unbalanced transformer at both ends of the coax should do it, with both the tower and the set in the workshop grounded but the coax outer isolated. I have toroids that will do it, but how should I wind them? Im thinking MF ununs could be made by winding 10 or 12 turns of coax on suitable toroids. Is this reasonable or am I way off. ALL suggestions, even those calling me a muppet ![]() received. Thanks, John G0WPA. |