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On 1 Dec 2005 08:23:30 -0800, "Brian Kelly" wrote:
I'm mulling the design/homebrewing of a hexagonal 20/17/15/12/10M wire beam a la the Traffie Hexbeam. The problem with just about all projects like this is the number of up/down iterations required to tweak the tuning of the things. Put it up, calculate the required changes in element lengths, take it down, make the adjustments, put it back up to check it again, pull it down and go thru the whole cycle ad nauseam. Pain in the tush. I've seen suggestions here and there about simply aiming a beam vertically upward and doing all the tuning at ground level instead. Which would save an awful lot of time and effort. If it works. Does anybody around here have any experience with this method and if so how succesful was it? Thanks, Brian w3rv It will get you close. However it really depends on the front to back of the antenna. Dipoles do poorly this way, 2 element beams slightly better. I've done 3 element 6m beams with the reflector only 4ft off the ground pointing up with excellent success. Seems the breakpoint is some where around better than 10or 12 DB F/B ratio. You do need distance from the ground or it acts like a reflector and messes with your measurments. Allison |
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