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Smokey March 6th 05 09:22 PM

Quick question
 

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..


Thanks,
The Other Smokey


Burr March 6th 05 09:30 PM

NO BUT,
Make a "L" around a corner. This will help a lot

--
Burr
I voted right, I voted Republican.
Long Live the Republican Party

"Smokey" wrote in message
oups.com...

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..


Thanks,
The Other Smokey




Smokey March 6th 05 09:34 PM



Got it, Burr!
Thank You!

I'll go run some more wire before it gets dark outside
I can go left with it maybe 150 feet or so
Smokey


Telamon March 6th 05 09:39 PM

In article .com,
"Smokey" wrote:

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..


That depends. If you double it back next to the length of wire already
run then it will not do much of anything. However, you could make a loop
out of it. As an example if you already have a 200 foot run to the back
of the yard you could then continue it across the back of the yard and
then back to the house.

You would have created a triangular loop with three sides of more than
400 feet. That is a good size loop. The ends of the loop would be
connected to the inner and outer coax conductors. Which end loop is
connect to the inner conductor probably does not matter except for the
local noise it will pick up.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Burr March 6th 05 09:48 PM

Make it slope also, maybe 15 feet from one end to the other.

Burr



"Smokey" wrote in message
oups.com...


Got it, Burr!
Thank You!

I'll go run some more wire before it gets dark outside
I can go left with it maybe 150 feet or so
Smokey




Burr March 6th 05 10:00 PM

In and OUT, what are you talking about???
I only have one jack and I run a long wire and if I run a loop I would
still only use one end and be sure to slope it so the sigs don't hit at the
say time.


Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
...
In article .com,
"Smokey" wrote:

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..


That depends. If you double it back next to the length of wire already
run then it will not do much of anything. However, you could make a loop
out of it. As an example if you already have a 200 foot run to the back
of the yard you could then continue it across the back of the yard and
then back to the house.

You would have created a triangular loop with three sides of more than
400 feet. That is a good size loop. The ends of the loop would be
connected to the inner and outer coax conductors. Which end loop is
connect to the inner conductor probably does not matter except for the
local noise it will pick up.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California




Telamon March 6th 05 10:05 PM

The inner (center) and outer conductor (shield) of the coax. Generally
there will be no preference as to which way the loop is connected.


In article W3LWd.41917$uc.5522@trnddc01, "Burr"
wrote:

In and OUT, what are you talking about???
I only have one jack and I run a long wire and if I run a loop I would
still only use one end and be sure to slope it so the sigs don't hit at the
say time.


Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
..
.
In article .com,
"Smokey" wrote:

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..


That depends. If you double it back next to the length of wire already
run then it will not do much of anything. However, you could make a loop
out of it. As an example if you already have a 200 foot run to the back
of the yard you could then continue it across the back of the yard and
then back to the house.

You would have created a triangular loop with three sides of more than
400 feet. That is a good size loop. The ends of the loop would be
connected to the inner and outer coax conductors. Which end loop is
connect to the inner conductor probably does not matter except for the
local noise it will pick up.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California


--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Burr March 6th 05 10:11 PM

I run the shield to ground, common ground.

Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
...
The inner (center) and outer conductor (shield) of the coax. Generally
there will be no preference as to which way the loop is connected.


In article W3LWd.41917$uc.5522@trnddc01, "Burr"
wrote:

In and OUT, what are you talking about???
I only have one jack and I run a long wire and if I run a loop I
would
still only use one end and be sure to slope it so the sigs don't hit at
the
say time.


Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
..
.
In article .com,
"Smokey" wrote:

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..

That depends. If you double it back next to the length of wire already
run then it will not do much of anything. However, you could make a
loop
out of it. As an example if you already have a 200 foot run to the back
of the yard you could then continue it across the back of the yard and
then back to the house.

You would have created a triangular loop with three sides of more than
400 feet. That is a good size loop. The ends of the loop would be
connected to the inner and outer coax conductors. Which end loop is
connect to the inner conductor probably does not matter except for the
local noise it will pick up.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California


--
Telamon
Ventura, California




Telamon March 6th 05 10:14 PM

If you have an unbalanced or "half an antenna" or "Marconi type antenna"
that's the right thing to do but not for a balance antenna.

In article feLWd.41921$uc.37216@trnddc01, "Burr"
wrote:

I run the shield to ground, common ground.

Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
..
.
The inner (center) and outer conductor (shield) of the coax. Generally
there will be no preference as to which way the loop is connected.


In article W3LWd.41917$uc.5522@trnddc01, "Burr"
wrote:

In and OUT, what are you talking about???
I only have one jack and I run a long wire and if I run a loop I
would
still only use one end and be sure to slope it so the sigs don't hit at
the
say time.


Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message

m..
.
In article .com,
"Smokey" wrote:

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..

That depends. If you double it back next to the length of wire already
run then it will not do much of anything. However, you could make a
loop
out of it. As an example if you already have a 200 foot run to the back
of the yard you could then continue it across the back of the yard and
then back to the house.

You would have created a triangular loop with three sides of more than
400 feet. That is a good size loop. The ends of the loop would be
connected to the inner and outer coax conductors. Which end loop is
connect to the inner conductor probably does not matter except for the
local noise it will pick up.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California


--
Telamon
Ventura, California


--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Burr March 6th 05 10:16 PM

AND,

I run naked wire, copper then splice it to the coax through the wall and
around the wires in the house to keep the EMF off the antenna. The ground
bleeds off any EMF that hits the lead.

Burr




"Burr" wrote in message
news:feLWd.41921$uc.37216@trnddc01...
I run the shield to ground, common ground.

Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
...
The inner (center) and outer conductor (shield) of the coax. Generally
there will be no preference as to which way the loop is connected.


In article W3LWd.41917$uc.5522@trnddc01, "Burr"
wrote:

In and OUT, what are you talking about???
I only have one jack and I run a long wire and if I run a loop I
would
still only use one end and be sure to slope it so the sigs don't hit at
the
say time.


Burr


"Telamon" wrote in message
..
.
In article .com,
"Smokey" wrote:

I just hung about 200 feet of wire in a straight line .

Would there be any benifit to doubling back?

I ran out of property space..

That depends. If you double it back next to the length of wire already
run then it will not do much of anything. However, you could make a
loop
out of it. As an example if you already have a 200 foot run to the
back
of the yard you could then continue it across the back of the yard and
then back to the house.

You would have created a triangular loop with three sides of more than
400 feet. That is a good size loop. The ends of the loop would be
connected to the inner and outer coax conductors. Which end loop is
connect to the inner conductor probably does not matter except for the
local noise it will pick up.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California


--
Telamon
Ventura, California







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