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Phil found a simple dipole only a few feet above ground would
outperform a mobile whip on 40 or 75 meters. NVIS sure...Wouldn't be so sure about long haul... My 40 meter mobile beats my home dipole at 40 ft on a 1000 mile path. Here is Phil`s Table 3: Hustler 75-meter Mobile whip mounted vertically on top rear corner of trailer-------S7 Part of the problem...His mobile is stunted... ![]() Same as above with 60-foot counterpoise connected to trailer-----------------------------S9 Two Hustler mobile whips back to nack as a horizontal loaded dipole-------------S9+5dB Again kinda stunted due to the lousy hustler coils... ![]() Could be better than that if better coils were used. 60-foot horizontal wire 8 feet high using trailer (30-ft. Airstream) as ground------S9+10dB Pretty mediocre if NVIS... Hustler 4BTV trap vertical with 75 meter resonator-------------------------S9+10dB 120 foot dipole, 15 feet high at center------------------------------------------S9+20dB Airstream Loop antenna------------------S9+20dB Home station dipole 50 feet high------S9+30dB Sounds like these are all NVIS paths... For those, I agree, a dipole/loop is usually best. One problem though... Often when mounting a low dipole next to a large metal trailer, etc, the coupling often will make tuning quite difficult. I'd try to get the dipole as far away from the trailer as possible *if* it acts squirrely... But a *good* mobile antenna could often be quite good to longer hauls. On the higher bands, a good mobile antenna should be just fine. If it were me, I'd #1 run the best mobile antenna I could rig up as a vertical. Then I'd run a dipole for low band NVIS stuff. In my case, I prefer paralleled multiband dipoles, at right angles, but if I can only run one wire, I'll make a multiband dipole split up with clipable insulators. If thats not workable, I suppose a trap dipole could be used, but thats always my last choice for a multiband dipole setup, being I like every drop of efficiency I can muster. But the losses with those is not that bad. With my mobile antenna, I could easily use *just it* if I wanted, on any band. But my mobile ain't no stunted hustler antenna. When I'm parked, my usual coil position is higher than the total height of the average hustler whip. My mobile eats hustlers for lunch and spits out the seeds... ![]() hustler coils vs my usual homebrew...Wasn't pretty... Adding the hustler coil is like turning the antenna into a dummy load, *even* considering that in most mobile setups, ground loss overshadows coil loss. So if you see a *drastic* decrease in perfomance when changing coils, Houston, we have a problem. I've seen many claim the "small" hustler coils are actually more efficient than the "super" coils, which was the type I tried. Luckily , I didn't pay for it, and I gladly gave it back after testing... I think he stuck it on a hustler vertical... Poor thing.... ![]() would likely do about as well. I'd use wire, or regular masts to make a tall vertical. To me, cans sound like a soldering nightmare... :/ MK |
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