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All,
I'm finally putting together a vertical antenna that I hope will work on 20 meters. Soil is sandstone with occasional bits of granite, impossible to drill into, it has to be chiseled out with a hand pickaxe. I won't begin to tell you the agony involved in chipping out a 2 1/2 foot cubic hole into this stuff, but I managed to do it. But in any case forget about soil conductivity, and forget about ground rods! There is a single ground rod courtesy of the electrical company... probably not at good depth for RF but it is the only game in town. Construction: The ground half of the antenna starts with 5 foot of 1 inch diameter iron pipe, sunk halfway into hole filled with concrete. 2 1/2 half feet of iron pipe are exposed above the dirt. This is connected to 10 foot of 3/4 inch copper pipe. At the 12 foot level I am mounting 4 radials, 8 foot 1 1/2 inches in length, of 1/2 inch diameter copper pipe. I am also mounting 4 copper guy wires, same length, that are intended to also work as additional radials. The radiative half of the antenna starts with 10 foot of 3/4 copper pipe, topped with a 9 foot carbon fiber fishing pole. A thin copper wire of about 6 foot 3 inches in length will be run up the fishing pole, for a total length of 16 foot 3 inches. I will be mounting rope guy wires on the botttom of the radiative half. The ground half and radiative half are connected together with a PVC coupler, and make contact with each other inside the coupler via a thick styrofoam spacer. Question: This antenna is designed to hopefully work on 20 meters. If I run a wire of 14 feet 4 1/2 inches up the fishing pole instead of the 6 foot 3 inches, and if I use guy wires of 12 foot 2 1/4 inches, leaving the radial lengths unchanged: will I get a vertical that I can work on both 30 and 20 meters? Thanks in advance, The Eternal Squire |
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