Hi Wes
The chokes do a few things. For transmitting, they keep the RF off the
feedline. It is critical for RX and TX.
Just as importantly, they keep RF and Noise off the feedline while
receiving, and this is what you want. The quieter you are, the more you
can hear.
Common Mode Currents can raise make it harder to hear weak signals and I
have seen and heard this with my own ears, as many others have. How about
I reduced my 80M noise floor from S9 to lower than S6. I'm not sure on
160M as I didn't really get going on 160 until after I was loving chokes.
I now buy them in lots of 50 in bulk from Digikey.
Read these pages. This is where I started a long time ago
http://www.yccc.org/Articles/W1HIS/CommonModeChokesW1HIS2006Apr06.pdf.
Well worth the read.
Next, read Jim's stuff http://k9yc.com/2018Cookbook.pdf
He is part of this group, and I know he will comment at some point.
Mike va3mw
On Thu, Dec 31, 2020 at 9:50 PM Wes <wes_n7ws@triconet.org> wrote:
> I have the same situation and no choke. IMHO the transmission line is
> just
> another random length radial. I don't have chokes on any of the others
> either.
>
> Wes N7WS
>
>
> On 12/31/2020 5:15 PM, Kenneth Silverman wrote:
> > Hello, I have an inverted-L and the radials are laying on the ground AND
> > the coax is on the ground too with radials right near the coax run. Do I
> > need a choke to stop any feedline coupling/radiation, and if so, where in
> > the feedline?
> >
> > The antenna is in the woods so burying either the radials or coax won't
> be
> > easy.
> >
> > Many thanks, Kenny K2KW
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