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[TowerTalk] wire antennas

To: <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: [TowerTalk] wire antennas
From: darrel@rabbit.dii.com (Darrel Van Buer)
Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 13:53:21 -0700
The National Electrical Code specifies wire size for antennas (I realize the US 
NEC does not
apply to ON land), though the concern in the NEC is mostly mechanical - i.e. it 
will stay up, 
not fall and give someone an RF burn or electrical shock.

The NEC recognizes 3 categories:

Receive only antenna up to 35 feet: #18 hard drawn copper or copper clad steel.
Antenna with under 150 feet long span: #14 "
Antenna over 150 feet: #12                 "

While I have put antennas that don't meet these guidelines, they also tended to 
break within
a few years.  

>From the point of view of losses, even #24 would only take 5 or 10% off
efficiency for an 80m dipole.  Legal limit power in a 50 ohm antenna would be 
under 6 amps
which would require #18 to #20 in an extension cord, but a wire in free air has 
less heat
problems than bundled or in conduit so somewhat smaller wire would still stay 
cool enough.

        Darrel AK6I

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