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On 5/20/10 12:32 , bpnjensen wrote:
...and I'm gonna use existing trees to put it up about 30 feet above ground, 15 feet above my rooftop on a 5x100 foot suburban lot. Power lines both in front and back of my house, the ones behind are much higher voltage, but not real high-tension wires. All other things being equal, am I better off: 1 - Putting this thing up parallel to, or more perpendicular to, the powerlines? That's going to depend on what's on them. As a rule, minimum coupling would occur with a perpendicular arrangement in the same plane. That said, the lines out of Bagnell Dam picked up and carried WLS and KMOX deep into the Ozarks with a city grade signal. To recover those, I oriented my antenna parallel to the power lines. You may have to experiment. 2 - Having the coax meet the wire at the base of the tree and grounding it there, or running the coax up the tree and then depending on the outer braid on the coax for ground purposes? The coax is grounded at the first termination point at my MFJ antenna phasing unit using a short, heavy copper wire to a ground rod. Run the wire where you want it to be, terminate the end with a 9:1, ground the wire side there. Run the coax to the secondary of the 9:1 and ground the coax at each end with an earth ground. |
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