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#1
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Just purchased a (tri-band 2, 1.25, .7 meters) Kenwood TH-F6A HT and was
wondering what I should use for a base antenna that will be over 60ft high (bet I'll get tons of intermod). One thought is to purchase the best tri-bander available or, perhaps there is too much compromise with an all-in-one. Would you use a dual bander and a mono, which band is the dual & which the mono or 3 monos? Of course with anything other than a tri-bander, a triplexer will be needed. Oh what trying decisions a ham must make! Any comments most welcomed. 73s west AF4GC |
#2
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On Wed, 01 Mar 2006 22:21:10 GMT, "west"
wrote: what I should use for a base antenna that will be over 60ft high Hi West, A simple tribander should be able to hit a similar tribander, or at least a quarterwave just as high 20 miles away. Repeaters should be a breeze to hit unless you are DXing garage repeaters. I can't see that you need more gain nor complexity unless its to make up for line loss climbing that tower. In that case, add a brick amplifier at the input to the line. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
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![]() west wrote: Just purchased a (tri-band 2, 1.25, .7 meters) Kenwood TH-F6A HT and was wondering what I should use for a base antenna that will be over 60ft high (bet I'll get tons of intermod). One thought is to purchase the best tri-bander available or, perhaps there is too much compromise with an all-in-one. Would you use a dual bander and a mono, which band is the dual & which the mono or 3 monos? Of course with anything other than a tri-bander, a triplexer will be needed. Oh what trying decisions a ham must make! Any comments most welcomed. 73s west AF4GC If I were dead set on all 3 bands, I would use a seperate ground plane antenna for each band, and an antenna switch. The ground planes are small. Gary N4AST |
#4
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In my experience a super antenna for repeater operation is a problem.
You bring up enough machines to create your own QRM. Keep it simple. On Wed, 01 Mar 2006 22:21:10 GMT, "west" wrote: Just purchased a (tri-band 2, 1.25, .7 meters) Kenwood TH-F6A HT and was wondering what I should use for a base antenna that will be over 60ft high (bet I'll get tons of intermod). One thought is to purchase the best tri-bander available or, perhaps there is too much compromise with an all-in-one. Would you use a dual bander and a mono, which band is the dual & which the mono or 3 monos? Of course with anything other than a tri-bander, a triplexer will be needed. Oh what trying decisions a ham must make! Any comments most welcomed. 73s west AF4GC John Ferrell W8CCW |
#5
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On Wed, 01 Mar 2006 22:21:10 GMT, "west"
wrote: Just purchased a (tri-band 2, 1.25, .7 meters) Kenwood TH-F6A HT and was wondering what I should use for a base antenna that will be over 60ft high (bet I'll get tons of intermod). One thought is to purchase the best tri-bander available or, perhaps there is too much compromise with an all-in-one. Would you use a dual bander and a mono, which band is the dual & which the mono or 3 monos? Of course with anything other than a tri-bander, a triplexer will be needed. Oh what trying decisions a ham must make! Any comments most welcomed. West, Some thoughts: The economics of feedline(s) might tilt the solution in favour of a single triband antenna with LDF4-50 or better, though you will probably want a very short flylead to the handheld. (Note that the loss in 100' of RG213 at load VSWR=1.5 is 5dB at 70cm, whereas LDF4-50 is 1.5dB, and the loss in a 5' tail of RG58C/U under similar conditions is 0.7dB.) If you only want to work repeaters and your path is good enough, losses might not be an issue. (Remember though that 5W handhelds get really hot on full power.) Is LDF4-50 overkill for a handheld? It might be more appropriate than with a higher powered transmitter. If intermods are an issue (as handhelds have less than adequate front end selectivity), do the repeaters use CTCSS... at least that helps prevent the transceiver breaking mute all day and night. Does the radio have a real rx attenuator that can help with intermods, to you have sufficient rx signal strength to be able to use it? At least you are not intending using a discone. Handhelds rarely work well on external broad antennas (for intermod reasons), and even the multiband antennas can be a challenge for handhelds. Owen -- |
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