Dennis,
Is there a photo or sketch available of your antenna anywhere by email ?
Note: Height above ground helped a lot when my receiving Delta antenna
was re-installed higher. The bottom wire went from 3 feet up to ~6
feet at my QTH.
73
Bruce-k1fz
http://www.qsl.net/k1fz/flag_antennas.html
On Sun, 11 Dec 2016 22:00:12 +0000 (UTC), Dennis W0JX via Topband wrote:
Mike and Don,
I have been using an expanded version of a DHDL here since November
2011. I was forced into going this way because the neighborhood around
me has become very noisy and the antenna seems to be less susceptible
to noise than my other antennas. I call it the Dual Flag array. I
essentially expanded the DHDL deltas into the shape of a flag. My flags
are large, approximately 24.5 feet tall and 32.5 feet long and
separated by three feet. The wires cross in the middle rather than at
the bottom so the flags are 180 degrees out of phase. They are similar
to a Waller Flag antenna in some respects.
My dual flag antenna is supported in the middle by a 31 foot pole made
up of military fiberglas poles and the ends are supported by two trees.
The bottom wire is 6 feet above ground. The feed transformer was wound
on a binocular core with two turns on the primary and 7 turns secondary
giving 918 ohms when fed with 75 ohm cable. I think my load resistor is
1290 ohms at the back of the second flag. You can put a variable pot
there and tune for best F/B but that is not necessarily the best RDF.
I have found my dual flag array to be the quietest RX antenna in my RX
system. It works very well on 160 through 40 although the pattern turns
broadside on 40 meters. It beats all my 450 foot beverages hands down
and is a great compliment to my HiZ 4 square which is now on the main
RX of the K3 with the dual flag on the sub RX. You can also build a
switching system to reverse directions but the circuit is rather
complicated so I have two of these dual flag antennas pointed in
different directions. I manually switch directions by moving the
transformers and loads around using banana jacks when really need to
grab a new country.
As with all antennas of this type, an effective common mode choke at
the feed point is an absolute must.SInce a rotatable version would be
very difficult to build and support on a tower, the next logical step
would be a smaller true Waller Flag like NX4D's Big Waller.
I must give credit to George AA7JV who modeled this antenna for me and
provided the inspiration through his TX3A DHDL RX antenna.
73, Dennis W0JX
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