Topband: Non-optimum antennas
Pete Smith
n4zr at contesting.com
Mon Dec 6 08:50:31 EST 2004
At 05:53 AM 12/6/2004, Tom Rauch wrote:
>Frankly Greg there is no iron-clad rule about how these
>systems work and what they do. Results depend heavily on the
>tower and what is on it and a half-dozen other things.
Tom makes a point I've been wondering about, based on my experience.
Since about 1958, I have been off 160. Last fall, I decided to try to
shunt feed my 97-foot tower with three yagis on it, one side-mounted at 69
feet and the other two on top, with mast extending to 104 feet. This
figured, by rule of thumb, to be well over 1/4 wavelength
electrically. Further complicating matters, the tower supports a 4-element
80-meter lazy vee dipole array. In order for the array to work properly,
the dipole feedlines must be brought in to the tower somewhere 25-30 feet
above ground, and thence down to the switchbox.
Amid warnings that it couldn't work, I tried a shunt feed at 40 and 50
feet. A straight gamma produced no match, so I hooked up an omega match,
which readily brought the SWR in to 1:1 at 1830. Laid out a few 120-foot
radials.
To my surprise, the antenna seems to work quite well. Even with only 200
watts, I seem to be louder at the other end than other stations are
here. I broke a number of pileups last weekend, and worked RO4M/6 first
call, when he was barely audible here. Question is, why? I would welcome
any speculations about why this crazy arrangement works at all, much less
why it seems to work fairly well, as well as any thoughts for
improvement. Or should I just put out more radials, and then relax and
enjoy it?
73, Pete N4ZR
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