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Hi Richard,
If this helps both my XYL and I will be in your debt ;-) So I should solder a shielded copper wire to the near end (aka the feed point but on the other side of the insulator --- near the house), let it run down the side of the house (about 22 to 25 feet down) and then to a ground rod? Then connect both the wire from the point where the new ground wire attaches and the wire (formerly the feedline) that connects to the "long" wire to the balun. Then its on into the house and the tuner via RG-8. Correct? What do I connect to the ground lugs on the tuner and rig? The inefficient RF ground wire that I have now? That wire currently goes to a ground strip that has 1/4 wave length radials that were cut for each band running through the attic and an additional wire that is attached to a pipe that I found in the attic that is a plumbing drain pipe vent. BTW, would there be any advantage to using other than 1:1 for the current balun? Any recommendations for the balun? I have seen some that can be made simply from coax. I hope that I am not being a pain but this RFI prob is a bugger and it would be REALLY nice to squash this one. It is bugging the XYL quite a bit and it limits my operating time ;-) Also, the ground loop that you are referring to would be current in the shield (or in my case the outer skin of the copper wire ;-) coming through the feed line and into the equipment. From there it is possibly getting into electrical ground through the power supply? Again, Many thanks for your help and 73, Vaughn, N2BHA "Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Sat, 03 Jan 2004 18:38:59 GMT, "Vaughn Combs" wrote: I have a few questions and I thought that this may be the group that could help. I have a nice sized backyard and would like to construct an antenna that would give me good performance on 80-10m bands. The convenient dimensions would put a support (far end) at either 92 feet from the back of the house (support exists that is about 15-20 feet up) or 120 feet from the back of the house (mast anchored to the other side of a shed could easily be installed. Or a more inconvenient support could be erected up to 300 feet out (no support buildings) at the absolute far end of the property. The width of the property as seen looking out the back window is about 65 feet (no supports existing on either side). Special circumstances and constraints: -- No tall trees on the property. -- Attic shack (attic window is probably about 25 feet up). Need to keep to the attic. -- Cable run from back of house to operating position within the attic would be approximately 25 feet -- MUST eliminate RFI in the shack and house. My current setup is an end-fed longwire that works well on all bands except 40m (rig shuts down as I am dipping the SWR to almost 1:1 ;-). I threw up the wire as winter was upon me. I have been off the air for almost 10 years and REALLY wanted to get on the air again. While the longwire is performing quite well with the exception of 40m I am getting a ton of RF in the shack and it is blanking out TVs and creating loud humming in speakers with 100W from the XMTR. I realize that this is most likely due to the fact that I have inefficient RF ground and I have cut and run radial at 1/4 wave for each band and ran them under the eaves up here in the attic. This has not solved the problem. I am friendly with all of my neighbors and have visited them and did testing on the bands with them on the phone. They are not experiencing any problems. My wife, while understanding, would REALLY like the problem to go away ;-) My main goal is to build an antenna that will solve the aforementioned RFI problem and that will provide good performance given my constraints. Any ideas would be GREATLY appreciated. Many Thanks and 73, Vaughn N2BHA Hi Vaughn, Your first shot is probably your best shot. You should drop a line from the near end antenna anchor point directly down to a ground and rely on a tuner to make up the differences. From the anchor point (where both wires are broke out) install a 1:1 Current Balun (Choke) between these points and the transmission line back to your rig to eliminate some of your noise into the house, and to get rid of the 40M instability (a classic symptom of Common Mode whose cure is in the Choke). The "ground" lead will radiate, but that is inconsequential. You may also experience a ground loop with it in parallel to your rig's source of ground. This is the blind-side of many hams who forget that long ground wires have impedance and thus become miserable grounds for RF. Unless you work battery operation without a floating charger, you WILL have this second path to ground (the 'trons will find their own way, even if it isn't obvious to you). I always run battery with a float charger through an 1:1 isolation transformer to kill Mains borne noise; and whenever I experience ground loops, I simply disconnect the charger. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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