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Hal:
I never thought about the aluminum shafts of arrows!!! The expensive ones are a titanium alloy--if I remember correctly... Make one tough antenna... I have been lucky enough to get some titanium rod (or alloyed aluminum) before--at a scrappers, you sure can tell it when you attack it with a hacksaw, this was tempered, apparently, and had the properties of spring steel... You are right, that anti-corrode stuff (gel/grease whatever that stuff is) is good to use on aluminum connections... I am in California--away from the coast--corrosion is not a very great problem here... but still every 5 years or so you do have to clean connections and redress... Warmest regards, John "Hal Rosser" wrote in message .. . In fact, many good aluminum/copper/stainless flats, rods, tubing, etc can be found for antenna projects... yellow pages should provide anyone with a source... Warmest regards, John One should be careful when using aluminum conductors for antennas. ACSR (Aluminum Conductor Steel Reinforced) may be a better choice for tensile strength. but Aluminum oxide is an insulator. and it forms easily at the connections. But I have made some good antennas out of Aluminum Arrows I even left the fletching (feathers) on for a couple of antennas. :-) |
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