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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 16:31:45 -0500, Dave Holford
wrote: Frank Dresser wrote: "A.Pismo Clam" wrote in message ... Hello All! snip The thought occurs to me that in the "good old days" aircraft used to have wire antennas, either strung around the airframe or trailing below and behind. Some still do Modern, high speed, aircraft can't do this so they have various solutions including HF probes and conformal antennas (I have seen unpainted panels on some large military aircraft which were identified as HF antennas) and it is not difficult to receive their signals over distances of several thousand miles. I wonder why no one has, at least as far as I am aware, attempted to adapt these solutions to Ham Radio? The aircraft has a height above Terrain (HAT) advantage that few homes are ever going to obtain. :-)) I have personal experience, some 40 years ago, with an HF antenna which consisted of the top half of the tail (about a 15 to 20 foot square metal surface) which was tuned by a remote ATU (Collins CU-351 ISTR) and performed at least as well as a fixed wire over the range of 2.5 to 30 MHz. I had considered at one time covering one end of the house with foil and trying the idea against ground, but for some reason I encountered some opposition from another member of my household. I think she figured 15 antennas was enough! Then there is the problem of electrical wiring on the inside of the wall too. :-)) The plane I'm building (335 MPH hot rod) is all advanced composite. The plans call for the antennas to all be inside. Unfortunately the VOR antenna is supposed to be in the horizontal stabilizer. They changed the material so the horizontal stab is all carbon fiber. Wellll...maybe it'd be good for deicing. You'll have to fix the return add due to dumb virus checkers, not spam Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair?) www.rogerhalstead.com Dave VE3HLU |