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Re: Topband: Best wire antenna for roof top location

To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: Best wire antenna for roof top location
From: W2RU - Bud Hippisley <W2RU@frontiernet.net>
Date: Sat, 8 Aug 2015 13:36:22 -0400
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
> On Aug 8, 2015, at 10:58 22AM, Tom W8JI <w8ji@w8ji.com> wrote:
> 
> Large buildings are not towers or poles. Buildings have a significant amount 
> of large conductive metallic things and noise generating junk inside.
> 
> If the building has wiring and large connected metallic things under the 
> horizontal antenna, it will act like a reflector. If the antenna is somewhat 
> low to the roof (less than 1/4 wave or more above the roof), the elevation 
> pattern won't be much different than a low dipole over flat earth. Most of 
> the radiation will be beamed straight up.
> 
> Even with a 400 ft high building, a horizontal antenna a fraction of wave 
> over the roof can be very disappointing.

Many years ago, at the start of my sophomore year in college, a classmate and I 
decided to operate CW Sweepstakes from my room in a 5-story dormitory.  The 
dormitory footprint was a long, skinny rectangle with brick parapets rising 10 
feet above the rooftop at the four corners of the building.  We had easy access 
to the roof, which was flat with a tar and gravel surface, so we strung an 
80-meter center-fed dipole diagonally across the roof between two opposing 
parapets — but, with the usual wire sag, the feedpoint was about 5 feet above 
the gravel.  We weren’t worried, because the roof was at least 70 feet above 
the surrounding terrain.

We had a single-813 transmitter that ran 500 watts input at a time when the 
legal limit was 1 KW input.  It was far more power than I was accustomed to, 
since my home station transmitter at that time was a Heath DX-40, running about 
a tenth as much power.  I was expecting “great things” in this contest, but it 
was one of the most disappointing outings I’ve ever participated in — we 
struggled for every QSO the entire weekend!

A few days after the contest we learned from the head of the college 
maintenance department that underneath all that tar and gravel was a solid 
sheet of copper! 

Moral of the story:  Believe what Tom tells you — especially his final sentence 
above!

Bud, W2RU  
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