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#1
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![]() "G.Beat", You might take a very close look at the quoted articles. I think you will find that neither antenna is as much of a 'dog' as they are made out to be, and that there are distinctions that have very little practical meaning. And no matter who wrote the articles, you should be aware of the intended audience... 'Doc |
#2
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"'Doc" wrote in message ...
"G.Beat", You might take a very close look at the quoted articles. I think you will find that neither antenna is as much of a 'dog' as they are made out to be, and that there are distinctions that have very little practical meaning. And no matter who wrote the articles, you should be aware of the intended audience... 'Doc The purpose of the web site reference is for the reader to understand how the antennas are constructed. I have no opinion on either antenna ... your reference of 'dog' and 'intended audience' is non sequitur w9gb non sequitur ['n?n 's?kwit?] noun 1 a statement having little or no relevance to what preceded it 2 (Logic) a conclusion that does not follow from the premises Abbrev.: non seq [ETYMOLOGY: Latin, literally: it does not follow] |
#3
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On Thu, 09 Oct 2003 04:53:36 GMT, "G.Beat"
wrote: "'Doc" wrote in message ... "G.Beat", You might take a very close look at the quoted articles. I think you will find that neither antenna is as much of a 'dog' as they are made out to be, and that there are distinctions that have very little practical meaning. And no matter who wrote the articles, you should be aware of the intended audience... 'Doc The purpose of the web site reference is for the reader to understand how the antennas are constructed. I have no opinion on either antenna ... your reference of 'dog' and 'intended audience' is non sequitur w9gb I think you got your own non sequiters in there. To use your own words: "Does it work? Quality made? Does the product have value? (For what you paid .. does it work well?)" If the antenna does work, if it has value (for what you paid...does it work well) -- and if it does, then the article has little value other that to look at "quality construction" issues that may or may not be relevant. Bob k5qwg non sequitur ['n?n 's?kwit?] noun 1 a statement having little or no relevance to what preceded it 2 (Logic) a conclusion that does not follow from the premises Abbrev.: non seq [ETYMOLOGY: Latin, literally: it does not follow] |
#4
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![]() "G.Beat", "Ubi est ignus?" 'Doc |
#6
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"G.Beat",
"Ubi est ignus?" 'Doc In seriousness, think it is, "Ubi ignus est?" unless I've forgotten all my Latin. Now, who wants to do a Smith Chart in Coptic Egyptian? Getting back to antennas, has anyone ever used 24 ga. high tensile strength stainless steel wire (think aircraft safety wire) as an antenna? I need a TRUE stealth design, as I've got more XYL restrictions than CC&R restrictions (yea, I know...get a new XYL....but too expensive, and this one is a GREAT cook!). I've got a roll I'm going to try out (nice neighbor with a tall tree 160 ft away) but would like any comments, etc. Max power out will be around 100W or so (Alinco DX70). Tuner will be the EDX-2 Alinco. (thus, piece of cake for tuning....but wondering about general comments on the SS wire) Comments? Modeling the install after the ARRL handbook on end-fed antennas w/counterpoise(s) for autotuner. 80-10M range. Tnx! Andrew A |
#7
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AA wrote:
I need a TRUE stealth design, as I've got more XYL restrictions than CC&R restrictions (yea, I know...get a new XYL....but too expensive, and this one is a GREAT cook!). Ham antennas should be part of any pre-nuptial agreement. :-) -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#8
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Ham antennas should be part of any pre-nuptial agreement. :-)
Yup...but I got my ticket AFTER marriage....c'est la vie. A |
#9
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AA,
Simper ubi sub ubi! And after 30 some years I'm lucky to get any of it right much less in the right order. Stainless steel is supposed to be 'not the greatest' conductor for antennas, but, as long as you already have it, why not? If you have to go buy a spool of it, you might try some 18ga. 'CopperWeld'. Probably cheaper... 'Doc |
#10
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Simper ubi sub ubi!
Still laughing....what was the old line, "if you ever get in a traffic accident...." , but, as long as you already have it, why not? Yup....this stuff is very high tensile strength SS and is approx. 24 gauge. I'm going to try it, just wondered if there were any caveats before doing so. The ARRL handbook of course recommends copper, but the SS wire is just about invisible against the sky. Keeps me out of the dog house (and one of these days I'm gonna wire that sucker and put in air/heat ala the infamous Baker Doghouse...at least I can have my radios while therein!!) Many thanks for the comments (always have to get my daily dose of rec.radio.amateur.antennas!) Andrew |
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