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Re: [TowerTalk] Re: Rotor control line swithcing

To: Rick <richardw@mho.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Re: Rotor control line swithcing
From: "Jim White, K4OJ" <k4oj@tampabay.rr.com>
Reply-to: k4oj@tampabay.rr.com
Date: Mon, 03 Nov 2003 20:00:03 -0500
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Perhaps my point of view is different since I look to keep to a minimum things that could break... when I operate I like to operate... the more switches and remote apparatus you have the more things you have that can fail - perhaps this is born from being in FL for about 25 years now where lightning is a given and components outside the shack are especially vulnerable.

If you wanted to control two rotators with a remote switchbox you would need to control that switchbox so you need some sort of cabling no matter what... if you have a second run of rotor control cable - which for Ham-? rotors is inexpensively done with two runs of housewiring from a home center! You probably can avoid those sleepless nights before radio contests wondering what will be broken at 00 Zulu.

And of course, you are not using more than one radio at a time at your QTH, Rick... if you want to do the SO2R or multi-single or multi-multi operations you HAVE to have independant feedlines... also, I wish I had your wallet and could afford to pay what you are quoting as pricing for feedline - $2.50 a foot! OUCH!!!!!!! Are you operating up in the UHF and VHF spectrum - I am stricly HF and cannot imagine paying that kind of money for feedline!

As far as that run of feedline gone bad - wouldn't that REALLY suck if it was your common feedline going to your remote switchmaster?

I just bought a spool of LMR400 off e-bay and including freight it was 40 cents a foot... fortunately I am also a scrounger and have friends who keep their eyes and ears open for commercial feedline replacement "drop" pieces...

For almost 10 years I used 70 ohm CATV hardline drops (free) as my feedlines to the base of the towers (4) and have just this
Summer began replacing them.


But, if you want to be a remote switch kinda guy go for it - for my style of operating where I demand reliability the KISS rule ALWAYS wins out - less tuff to break means less stuff is broken....

Your mileage may vary! What's your call and QTH, Rick?

Jim, K4OJ




Rick wrote:


Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Rotor control line switching



sounds to me like trouble waiting to happen...

A remote relay/switch box is one more thing outside to go wrong....

I just replaced a control cable run with some house wiring this weekend
- 250 feet of house wiring was less than 30 bucks....

K4OJ


Jim,


I sure fail to see the economics in your analysis.   It cost 30 bucks to
replace 250 ft of control line.  Let's see, if you have 5 antennas and you
are going to run in 5 coax lines instead of 1.  That is an extra 1000 ft of
coax.  Assume you use good  quality coax like Times Microwave LMR 900 at
about $2.50 a foot.  The "extra expense" of running four additional coax
lines would be $2500.   Of course you would have saved 60 bucks on control
line (original plus the new you just ran) plus the cost of the coax switches
(maybe 300 bucks on the high side).

In my case I have 5 towers and by using "remote relay switching" I used only
about 550 ft of LMR 900.   If I had run a single coax to each tower I would
have needed about 1600 ft. more of coax.   Obviously, the number of
additional feet required varies with the physical layout of the different
towers; where the distance from the shack to the first tower is where the
major expense (or savings) would come in.

Running coax does not eliminate all problems either;  I helped a buddy of
mine replace 150 ft of LMR 600 a couple years ago that had gone bad.

I have had very minimal trouble with my system and I have been using it at
my QTH for about 8 years.   I have used inline switching since the early
80's and the need to run only one coax and rotor cable into the shack, far
outweighs the need to run a coax line for each of the 10 HF amateur bands..
By merely pushing the "band select" button on my Orion (Yaseu Mark V
before), I am on the correct antenna and rotor (for the antennas with
rotors).

Actually I run two rotor control lines because one of my towers has a M2
rotor.   The M2 and Hy-Gain rotors are not even remotely compatible and
running one additional rotor cable outweighed the headaches involved with
double switching rotors and control boxes on one rotor cable.



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See: http://www.mscomputer.com for "Self Supporting Towers", "Wireless Weather Stations", and lot's more. Call Toll Free, 1-800-333-9041 with any questions and ask for Sherman, W2FLA.

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_______________________________________________

See: http://www.mscomputer.com for "Self Supporting Towers", "Wireless Weather Stations", and lot's more. Call Toll Free, 1-800-333-9041 with any questions and ask for Sherman, W2FLA.

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