I use twinlead (DX-wire or Wireman) 300 Ohm,  less attenuation compaired to 
RG58 and small. not much windload.
Doing its job for over 5 years now. Only fixed at the ends.
Kees, PE5T
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Les Kalmus" <w2lk@bk-lk.com>
Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2013 4:21 PM
To: <topband@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: Topband: Beverage Woes
 I use ladder line from the Wireman and from Davis RF. I think the 
conductors are copper plated solid steel.
I bought 1/4" thick 2" wide strips of acrylic from McMaster Carr and made 
a pair of clamps of 6" long pieces by cutting grooves for the wire 
thickness, two holes for ss bolts and one for a rope.
These clamp the ends tightly and the acrylic is useable outdoors.
 The ladder line is supported every 50 -75 feet by a 3-4" piece of pvc wide 
enough to easily pass the ladder line and with a large and small hole in 
it. The small hole is for a screw into a convenient tree and the large is 
to pass the screwhead.
Where there were no trees, mainly a swampy area, I used metal fence posts 
with a piece of pvc over the post with a bolt through limit how far down 
it slides on the post and a T on the top end. The ladder line passes 
through the T.
The supports are at the end only. The ladder line has a twist every 3 or 4 
feet and rides easily through the pvc supports. This has been up for at 
least three years and has survived tree limbs, frost, snow and people with 
no problems to date.
I think I have pictures of the clamps if anyone is interested.
Les W2LK
On 10/23/2013 5:46 PM, Mike Waters wrote:
 Whatever you use for wire, it needs to float at the supports. Anchor it 
at
only one end and tension it tightly at the other end.
I use my own ladder line, made from .061" diameter plated steel electric
fence wire and spacers made from 1/4" dia. plastic coat hangers. Supports
are 10' high and 100' apart. It's taken a lot of abuse, including large
tree branches falling on it and a porch roof hurled against it by a small
 tornado. Some supports broke during the flying porch roof incident, but 
the
wires never broke either time.
WD-1A military telephone wire works well, if you have the right impedance
matching transformers.
Having said all this, I know that a lot of Topbanders use that brown
plastic window line for their Beverage antennas. Which kind lasts?
73, Mike
http://www.w0btu.com/Beverage_antennas.html
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