Hi,
I'm dealing with life on a small lot, too. I have a wire up (quarter
wave on 160) that somewhat wants to work. I can load it through a
matching network (aka tuner) on 80, 40, etc but it does NOT want to load
on 160 meters. I can hear quite a bit but TX is woefully inadequate. I
plan to raise it higher off the ground AND redo the counterpoise. I
expect I'll have to make some sort of transformer to get it to load
well, too. There are enough pieces that I am not planning to do anything
until after I build the impedance measurement bridge and get some idea
of just where to go. Meanwhile I might whiz up some transformers and
take a shot in the dark but without knowing where I am I can't really
know how to get somewhere else. Maybe I'll get lucky. Those counterpoise
wires - like the antenna wire - cannot run in straight lines because
there is not enough room (maybe one or two can).
That same antenna used down below 500 kc has pulled in NDB stations from
as far away as 1225 miles! When I try to pump about 35 watts into it I'm
lucky if even ONE RBN receiver hears it and the signal is dismal. I only
get that much when I remove the 'tuner' and feed the antenna direct from
the Ranger's Pi network. 80 and 40 are good to go with that wire at less
than 5 watts.
If I get it to work I'll be back with more info. I am getting my own
ideas of what to try from some of the same articles online that you guys
have referenced. Trying to adapt to what I have here.
73,
Bill KU8H
On 09/21/2013 09:31 AM, James Rodenkirch wrote:
During the summer of 2011 I came across a website hosted by
Simone Mannini, IW5EDI, of Firenze, Italy, that featured a “160 meter antenna
for a small lot.” The information and
picture, supplied by Troy Martin, K5CBL, of Madill, Oklahoma, intrigued me. For
details on the IW5EDI antenna,
visit his website at <http://bit.ly/1890Ay0>.
Thinking,
“Why not?,” I assembled the “small lot” antenna, found five 75’ foot wires to
use as counterpoises/radials, erected the antenna temporarily outside my shack
and ran the five counterpoise wires along the back patio deck and out on the
front yard.
I connected
the antenna to my venerable ICOM 735, keyed it up and found the SWR, without a
tuner, was 1.3:1! It was Miller Time! Cranking
the power down as low as it could go – and inserting a quickly-assembled 2db
in-line attenuator – I entered the 2010 CQ WW 160 Meter Contest in the QRP
category. At the end of the contest, I had garnered 182 QSOs, 37 multipliers
and 3 (count ’em, THREE) DXCC multipliers.
There ya go - quick, easy way top get on 160 and have some fun!
72, Jim Rodenkirch, K9JWV
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Topband Reflector
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