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Re: [TowerTalk] Reverse Fed Towers

To: wosborne44@gmail.com, towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Reverse Fed Towers
From: Gene Smar <ersmar@verizon.net>
Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2015 14:14:17 -0600 (CST)
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
William:

I use both shunt feed on 160M and reverse-feed 1/4 WL wire (sloper) for 80M on 
the same tower. However, I have a ten-element Yagi atop the tower and I have 
grounded all parasitic elements on it for capacitive loading of the entire 
tower. I didn't model either of these antennas but climbed, set and measured 
SWR a few times until I got the tower tap point just right (lowest SWR on my 
MFJ-259 analyzer.)  I also adjusted the length of the sloper wire for further 
SWR reduction.

BTW - I did not merely hang the sloper wire off the center conductor of the 
coax. I tied an egg insulator onto the tower near where I thought the tap point 
ought to be (55 AGL on a 64 foot tall tower.) I tied the sloper (69 feet long 
#12 insulated) onto the other side of the insulator but allowed about 2 feet of 
length to hang off the insulator. (The far end is connected to another 
insulator that is on a bungee cord wrapped around a roof vent on my house.)  I 
connected the center conductor and sloper wire with a wire nut and began my SWR 
measurements. I was able to cut a few inches off the hanging wire at a time 
until I arrived at an acceptable SWR. I didn't undo the entire wire until after 
all the adjustments had been completed. Then I let the excess wire slip through 
the egg insulator until I had only a few inches sticking out. I believe I even 
kept the wire nut in place, rather than soldering the connection to the coax 
center. I applied a couple wraps of electrical tape to
  the center wire's insulation to protect it from sunlight.

BTW2 - As for the coax braid connection to the tower, I stripped about 4 inches 
of jacket off the cable and twisted the braid into a single wire. I used a 
Harger 213T cable-to-flat clamp to connect the braid to the tower angle steel 
members.  This is the connection I had to move around the tower to find a low 
SWR spot initially.  The clamp made it easy to do and undo.  Round member 
towers such as Rohn will probably need a different type of connector for the 
braid.
 
BOTTOM LINE:  Face it - you'll have to do some tower climbing to get this 
right, but shunt feeding and sloper/reverse feed wires do work.
 
 
73 de
Gene Smar  AD3F
 
 


On 12/15/15, wosborne44@gmail.com wrote:

I have a tower that has a base that is in concrete and grounded. I 
would like to make it a vertical without installing insulators. Has 
anyone used elevated radials with reverse feeding, i.e., connecting the 
center conductor to the radials and the shield to the grounded tower? I 
see this in the ARRL handbook but I cannot seem to make a model of it 
work. Any help would be welcome.

Thanks,

William Osborne--K5ZQ

270-205-9565

Wosborne44@gmail.com



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