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The most common problem is if water gets into the traps (if your horizontal
antenna has them) Some traps have drain holes and they should be oriented so the drain hole is downwards A friend had them upwards and the SWR would go way out of sight when it rained, so he was off the air until the traps dried out. We changed them, no problems even in a downpour -- Caveat Lector (Reader Beware) Help The New Hams Someone Helped You Or did You Forget That ? "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... The short answer is that water won't cause any problem, and even salt water probably won't (except corrosion). When water bridges across a driven element or to the boom (not by any means the same as the Earth), you've put a high value resistor and capacitor across the driven element or from the element to the boom. Pure water is a good insulator but acts also like a lossy capacitor at RF; rain water on an antenna will have some dissolved minerals so that reduces the shunt R. The feedpoint impedance of a beam is quite low, so all you've done is put a high value of impedance across a low value. The change is therefore very small. This holds for half wave dipoles, quarter wave verticals, and most other common antennas, too. A few antenna types have high impedances at the feedpoint, like an electrically short whip, or a full wavelength dipole. Although I don't know of any rigorous tests, I don't think even these are commonly bothered much by water. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Dan Jacobson wrote: Can one in theory still transmit if rain water creates a bridge across the driven element, or even also to 'ground'? A DC short circuit but not a RF short circuit? Or is it just salt water that is worrisome? |
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