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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Dee Flint wrote: wrote in message ups.com... New to ham radio. Interested in building an antenna for a base station. I dont have anything yet, just in the planning stage. Thought about buying a handheld and using that as part of my "base station" one maybe capable of 2 440 and 6. These seem cheaper used than the home units. Yes the handhelds are cheaper but they have a lot less power. However if your antenna is high enough, you can do amazing things with it. My question is, is there information out there on how to build one? I have a radio shack book at home that has a plan for a 440. It uses aluminum ground wire. What I find when working with this stuff is it is impossible to make it perfectlyu straight. Doesn't that effect the performance? I mean it comes coiled and when I cut it to length I cant get it perfectly straight. It doesn't have to be perfectly straight. You won't notice any difference unless you have loops coiled in it. Also, it is posisble to have good performance with one antenna for all the bands? Or is it absolutely necessary to have one antenna for each band? I have limited room. Yes there are multiband antennas. Basically, they use some type of coil or trap to subdivide the antenna. The full length of the antenna is used for the lowest frequency, etc. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE What would you recommend? Building a beam for two meter? If I did that would it work ok on 440 too? I'm not into a lot of VHF/UHF work personally however my OM likes loop antennas. However loops don't have any significant gain unless you stack them. Many people do like beams and some build their own. There are MANY good antenna books available from the ARRL. Start with The ARRL Antenna Book. As for working on more than one band, only those designed with that in mind will work adequately on two bands. If it is designed for only one band, it will be very bad on the other. Also, I have seen beams mounted bothe on it's side and upright like an outside tv antenna. Which way is better? Vertical elements on beams will yield vertical polarization and are thus suitable for repeater work and a lot of FM simplex. Horizontal elements will yield horizontal polarization and are thus suitable for weak signal work such as working distant SSB stations (horizontal is the custom on SSB). You really need to get and read a good antenna book. A newsgroup cannot give you enough detail. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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