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oups.com... I have found the same thing. I was able to dig up a few product reviews, but no technical information. I'm working on a web page about the Joey right now for posterity. I've got an SWR analyzer and a portable HF rig, so I'll take it out to a greater-than-one-wavelength field and make my measurements out there. I did make one discovery today, though. "WL-32" is an Outbacker part number for the "Wander Lead," the banana wire that you re-patch to change bands. The WL-32/80 is apparently not the antenna; it's marked next to the bottom tap, to which one end of the WL is supposed to be attached. The other end goes in the tap marked with the desired band. Because the lead is 32 inches long, I suspect that a WL-80 is just a metric version of a WL-32. I am also guessing that because the antennas are hand made and that specifications are always subject to change, the different lengths of the antennas are insignificant. Yes, the wander lead always goes at the bottom position, sometimes only marked as WL (as my Outbacker does) - then you wrap the lead around the whip to the desired "tap" for the band (e.g. 40 M) you are going to use - and plug Wander lead plug into that tap. w9gb |
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