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On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 10:52:54 -0700, Richard Clark
wrote: You must have some idea of what band you are going to use it on, what is it? 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Thanks, Richard for the comments. I would like to use it for 75-6 meters as I am not worried about 160 meters. I would like to use it on 75 meters, as it is the band most likely to meet the coverage I am interested in, but also to operate all bands as I would like not to change antennas all the time. I have loaded the 20 meter and 40 meter antennas with it to see how it works on other bands, but they really suck!. I don't know if it is the way they are wound or what, but tuning the 20 for six works well, but not with other bands. Going lower doesn't help. As for the mobile vs base antennas, there may be some difference. The problem occurs when using a quarter wave or shorter dipole. However, a quarter wave vertical is a match! This is part of my questioning. Also, the fact that the tuner will be virtually at the antenna rather than the coax, may make some difference, although, technically, I think the coax would lower the reflected power to the tuner. The theory i was hearing was that the loading coil takes all the missing length of antenna and heats up. I can't imagine auto-tuners having as large a coil as this manual tuner. (It uses a wire wrapped around a toroid of some sort. ) I imagine an autotuner uses much smaller inductors tied together thru relays. I am trying to think of a type thurmometer that I could use that wouldn't interact with the tuner to see if it heats up. I will probably test the antenna this weekend if I can get the parts and time.... -- 73 for now Buck N4PGW |