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John,
A single wire is going to have a huge variation in impedance over the 5 - 30 MJz range. You are much better of with a fan type antenna that has multiple dipoles, all tied together at the feedpoint. I saw one of these in a ham catalog, but can't remeber where. For a compromise, I would cut dipoles for 6.5, 11, and 16 MHz. Tie them together at the feedpoint, and fan out the ends. You don't really need a balun, but if you want to, use a 1:1 with either 50 or 75 Ohm coax. The length of eacch dipole in feet is 468/MHz, half of that length on each side. Tam/WB2TT "Jon Gauthier" wrote in message ... I have a Grundig YachtBoy SW/MW receiver that I'd like to connect to an external long-wire antenna, but I'd like to have the antenna on the roof, while I'd be listening in my office in the basement. I'd like to make a couple of simple baluns to match it to 75 ohm coax. What's the impedance that the receiver is expecting? It's just a phono plug input... Grundig's web site is, ah, not very technical... -- Jon Gauthier Given the likely reaction to an increase in terror-alert level to "severe threat imminent," wouldn't a more appropriate alert color be brown? -Brad Simanek on www.ruminate.com |
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