Bill Coleman wrote:
> On Jul 25, 2006, at 12:46 AM, Chris wrote:
>
>
>> If quality filters (and or stubs) are used, what have others
>> experienced as minimum speration distance of a beam at 40ft and a
>> vertical for SO2R operating at or near 100w?
>>
>
> Sorry to reply to an old thread.
>
> I don't know about 40 feet, but I've been successful at running a
> limited SO2R on phone with a tribander and vertical separated by 120
> feet with NO filters at all and 100 watts.
>
> Of course, you'll hear noise if you get near the second harmonic of
> the transmitting rig (although that doesn't happen so often with phone).
>
> It would probably go better with some filters. I've see designs on
> the web for coaxial stubs, which seems like they would work well.
>
> At 40 feet, you're going to get 9 times more bleedthrough than I have
> at 120 feet, so you are at higher risk for fundamental overload.
>
> I've also used an 80m doublet that has one leg anchored to the tower
> that holds the tribander.
>
> Bottom line: this can work, you'll have to try it and see.
>
> Bill Coleman, AA4LR, PP-ASEL Mail: aa4lr@arrl.net
> Quote: "Not within a thousand years will man ever fly!"
> -- Wilbur Wright, 1901
>
>
>
I run 1 tower SO2R. With stubs and bandpass filters 100 W is no problem
at all. I usually run high power and only have problems with 2nd
harmonics +/- 10-15 KHz.
I used a vertical for the second radio initially and replaced it with a
TH7 at 25 ft. The difference was 5-6 S units! Verticals suck, big-time!
Barry W2UP
--
Barry Kutner, W2UP
Newtown, PA
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