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Old February 15th 05, 03:56 AM
Michael
 
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Default antenna expirement flops

I just wanted to share the results an antenna experiment I did tonight. In
the rain, no less.

The antenna was simple. 300 feet of solid core 20 gauge copper wire. I ran
it from the 500 ohm connector of my R-75, out of the shack and all the way
into the back yard. The yard extends about 200 feet, so I had to double the
wire back in the direction of the shack for 100 feet.

No mater what I tune the dial to, I'm getting splashed from the local 50
kilowatt am stations. The preselector doesn't clean it up either.

Every time I exceed 200 feet of wire, I have the same problem.

Weird...

Michael


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Old February 15th 05, 05:07 AM
Tom Sevart
 
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"Michael" wrote in message
...

No mater what I tune the dial to, I'm getting splashed from the local 50
kilowatt am stations. The preselector doesn't clean it up either.

Every time I exceed 200 feet of wire, I have the same problem.


Sounds like your front end is being overloaded by the AM stations. I guess
the simple solution would be to not exceed 200 feet of wire. A 200' random
wire should work well, I'd think. But if you have local 50 KW stations,
then it's not unusual to get a lot of imaging and intermod with a long
antenna.

--
Tom Sevart N2UHC
Frontenac, KS
http://www.geocities.com/n2uhc


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Old February 15th 05, 05:12 AM
Guy Atkins
 
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What do you mean by "splash"?

I have Beverage antennas of 450 and 700 feet, oriented toward my desired
targets *and* (unfortunately) a number of 50kw MW stations in the
Seattle/Tacoma area. I also have a 1 kw station 1.4 miles off the end of one
of the antennas. I have a number of S-9+65db stations on the dial, but my
R-75 and IC-756Pro handle them well. However, I'm not using the hi-Z input
but the 50-ohm unbalanced input via a Beverage matching transformer and
grounded, double-shielded coax.

Have you tried adding a transformer and the 50-ohm input?

Guy Atkins
Puyallup, WA USA


"Michael" wrote in message
...
I just wanted to share the results an antenna experiment I did tonight. In
the rain, no less.

The antenna was simple. 300 feet of solid core 20 gauge copper wire. I
ran it from the 500 ohm connector of my R-75, out of the shack and all the
way into the back yard. The yard extends about 200 feet, so I had to
double the wire back in the direction of the shack for 100 feet.

No mater what I tune the dial to, I'm getting splashed from the local 50
kilowatt am stations. The preselector doesn't clean it up either.

Every time I exceed 200 feet of wire, I have the same problem.

Weird...

Michael



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Old February 16th 05, 02:03 AM
Michael
 
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Default


"Guy Atkins" wrote in message
...
What do you mean by "splash"?

I have Beverage antennas of 450 and 700 feet, oriented toward my desired
targets *and* (unfortunately) a number of 50kw MW stations in the
Seattle/Tacoma area. I also have a 1 kw station 1.4 miles off the end of
one of the antennas. I have a number of S-9+65db stations on the dial, but
my R-75 and IC-756Pro handle them well. However, I'm not using the hi-Z
input but the 50-ohm unbalanced input via a Beverage matching transformer
and grounded, double-shielded coax.

Have you tried adding a transformer and the 50-ohm input?

Guy Atkins
Puyallup, WA USA


Hiya, Guy.... That is exactly what I already have currently with one of my
roof antennas, the 200' "Frankenstein. That antenna is ideal !!!! A great
DX'ing antenna. Detailed info is on my web page. See the link in my
signature. I just decided to try the 300' wire with no additional dressings
like transformers or coax feeds. The end result... The local AM flame
throwers are strong enough to overload the front end even on an R-75.

--
Respectfully,

Michael

Location: New Jersey
Primary Receiver: R-75 with full Kiwa mods
Antennas: G5RV, 200ft "Frankenstein" roof wire
Additional Radios: 7600GR,KA-1101,KA-1102
PL-550, KA-989, Info-Mate 837, GE-SR III
Westinghouse H-104 (seven tube)
Web Site: http://md_dxing.tripod.com


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Old February 16th 05, 02:18 AM
Michael
 
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"Guy Atkins" wrote in message
...
What do you mean by "splash"?


Intermod...

Michael




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Old February 15th 05, 05:03 AM
 
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Default

It's a wonder you didn't get hit by lightning fooling around with all of
that wire out there in all that rain. www.lightningstorm.com
cuhulin

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Old February 15th 05, 12:07 PM
RHF
 
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Default

MICHAEL,
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Old February 16th 05, 02:05 AM
Michael
 
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Default


"RHF" wrote in message
ups.com...
MICHAEL,
.
First make sure that you have both of your
Icom IC-R75's Pre-Amplifiers turned OFF.


I did and I tried the att also. Even with the att switched on, the local AM
stations still overload the radio. It is just too much wire for my
location. North NJ is the king of the MW transmitters. Lots of ground
water and excellent conductivity. I just cant use that much wire.

Michael


TRY A LOOP ANTENNA :
Re-run the Wire as a Loop-On-the-Ground (LOG) Antenna.
Try to have the Out-Leg of the Loop separated as
much as possible from the Back-Leg of the Loop.
Use the Two HI-Z Terminals of your Icom IC-R75
for the input for this Loop Antenna.
.
USE AN "EXTERNAL" ATTENUATOR :
Build the GIZMO Box and use the built-in Attenuator
to reduce the Signal Levels.
READ - Portable AM/FM Shortwave Radio-to-Antenna
"GIZMOE" Connector Box
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/2070
NOTE - If you use the NE-2 Lite-Bulb and on a 'normal day'
the Bulb is always Glowing or Blinking; then Trim your
Antenna by 25 Feet and check it again - repeat as needed.
.
USE A MATCHING TRANSFORMER AND GROUND :
Continue to use your 200+ Feet Long Wire Antenna
and Build a Voltage Step-Down Transformer :
Use a Ferrite Core with a 25:1 or 36:1 Turns Ratio.
* 25:1 Ratio = Thirty-Five (35) Turns and Seven (7) Turns
* 36:1 Ratio = Thirty-Six (36) Turns and Six (6) Turns
Use a Ground Rod and Wire with this Matching Transformer.
.
CUT THE SIZE OF THE ANTENNA DOWN BY . . . . . . . . .
* Cut the Size of the Antenna from 300 Feet to 250 Feet
and use 50 Feet of Coax Cable as a Feed-in-Line.
* Cut the Size of the Antenna from 300 Feet to 200 Feet
and use 100 Feet of Coax Cable as a Feed-in-Line.
Plus use a Matching Transformer and a Ground Rod at the
junction of the Antenna Wire Element and the Coax Cable.
.
TIP - In the Future - Pick a Dry and Warm Sunny Day 'to do'
your Out-Side Antenna Work )
.
.
iane ~ RHF
.
All are WELCOME and "Invited to Join" the
Shortwave Listener (SWL) Antenna eGroup on YAHOO !
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortwave-SWL-Antenna/
.
Some Say: On A Clear Day You Can See Forever.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/502
.
I BELIEVE: On A Clear Night . . .
You Can Hear Forever and Beyond, The BEYOND !
With a Shortwave Listener SWL Antenna of your own making.
"If You Build It {SWL Antenna} You Will Hear Them !"
.
.



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