I have a small cabin and station on a mountain top. My experience is that
horizontal antennas set right at a cliff face act as if they are much higher
than their towers… to the point that real towers are pretty counter productive.
Verticals act as if they are elevated 400 feet in the air (which id close to
being on salt water… and in your case they would be). I have modeled but not
built antennas that go down the slope. Personally I would do as I have done…
put the best vertical you can at the cliff line and run your radials down the
cliff. For higher bands just put antennas on 20-30 food supports right at the
cliff face.
On Dec 3, 2015, at 8:02 AM, Stan Stockton <wa5rtg@gmail.com> wrote:
> Robb,
>
> I assume you do not have a 130 foot support at the edge of the cliff.
> Perhaps you have a loaded dipole? If you think the cliff will block your
> signal in the most desired directions, you will have to do something
> different but if not, I would suggest you put two radials in line with each
> other with short supports every 25 feet or so above ground by 2-3 feet as
> near the edge as you dare go and hang the vertical element over the cliff.
> It would look like an upside down vertical with a short feedline and surely a
> good performer at least in the directions that cliff is not blocking. If the
> cliff blocks important directions I would go for a vertical as you have
> described with the shield side of the coax hanging down the side and the
> portion above the edge of the cliff vertical even if it had to be loaded.
> 40-50 feet vertical with two inverted V looking top loading wires to make it
> resonant on about 1830 will work well.
>
> 73...Stan, K5GO
>
>> On Dec 3, 2015, at 7:07 AM, Robb Webb Proprietor of Robb Webb Photography
>> <robb@robbwebbphotography.co.uk> wrote:
>>
>> Good day fellow Topband Experimenters.
>> When it comes to antennas I am a keen experimenter but technically a suck it
>> and see merchant rather than a design pro so I ask for your expert opinions.
>> I live near a high cliff overlooking the sea. The cliff faces south, is a
>> good 100ft high and is made up of mud and clay that over the years has been
>> collapsing into the sea. I am considering mounting my Topband dipole as a
>> vertical antenna above the cliff edge with the ground portion of the antenna
>> going down the cliff edge below the vertical portion. I'm aware I may need
>> to add radials but is there anything else I should need to consider. This is
>> in preparation for the Boxing Day Stew Perry contest.
>> Thanks for your help.
>> Robb
>> G0URR
>>
>>
>> Robb Webb Photography
>> Bringing Photography to life
>> Mobile: 07891 575892
>>
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