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Yes, antennas are important, and the bigger the better, but...
I worked Great Britain from Massachusetts on 10 watts with a simple 40 meter dipole up about 20 feet. It wasn't ideal, but it worked. I worked Estonia from Oregon on SSB (all tubes, too) with 100 watts with a 10 meter half-wave loop pinned to the ceiling of a spare room in a 1-story rented house. You _will_ do _much_ better with a "real" antenna system, but you _can_ do _amazing_ things with a few pieces of wire and some creativity. So if you can, by all means put up the heavy metal in the sky, but don't stop if you can't do it right off. Get a copy of the ARRL antenna book, or maybe a copy of the Handbook from the year your rig was born. You live out in the country so you don't need to worry about stealth antennas -- if you have trees and aren't afraid of heights they make very good supports for long wire antennas. Just think about who you want to talk to this year and aim the antenna appropriately. No Spam wrote in message news:ifgU75G3LLdo-pn2-IWO2j4d3zUld@localhost... On Tue, 23 Dec 2003 00:00:19 UTC, (geojunkie) wrote: Antennas. A ham station is the antenna farm. The rest of it is much less important. Do you have the room to put up a 40 meter dipole? 66 feet linear length. Get it up at least 40 feet, the higher the better. For 20 and above, a basic antenna is an 3 element trap yagi. Again 40 feet minimum height, 80 is even better. |
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