No the 2 closest towers are 250 feet away the further ones are 500 feet given each tower has at least 2 monobanders each independently fed I need a total of 5000 feet Sent from my iPhone John, Short
John, Short of suggesting that you should consider remoting the transmitter, and linking the receiver IF back via 10 GHz gunplexer or digital via internet, all of which likely be more expensive, let
You can save a significant amount of money and coax by putting the Yagi switching relays at the base of the towers instead of inside the shack. They are still easily accessible and this leaves just o
John. Most of us would run 2 radios worth of hard line to a central spot and then have a 2 x 6 - 2 x 10 antenna switch that feed all the antennas in the field. This cuts the feed line expense substan
I want to be able to put both antennas one the same tower on 2 different radios. Each of the 4 towers is going to have a mono band stack of either 2 or 3 six element yagis plus 5 antennas for 80 and
John, Take a look at the Antenna Genius switches that 4O3A sells. I have the 8x2. Very well built, excellent performance (great isolation, very low return loss), lots of control options. http://www.4
If I understand this correctly you will need to ensure that both transceivers transmit at the same time or find one with an indestructible front end. John KK9A I want to be able to put both antennas
I suggest the stack matches at the tower base and stand up dog house for them. Thus inside storage of matches and the equalizing coaxial cables (100's of feet of hardline) so they are not on the towe