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After the bout of windy weather we had a week or so ago, my mini antenna
farm was wrecked. My HF6V sustained a broken mast, which was easily repairable. My OCF dipole on the other hand, stopped working properly. Originally cut for the standard 80-40-20-10 config, the best SWR near 80 meters has risen to around 4.37 MHz, 40 meters is around the correct frequency, but has SWR has risen a bit to around 2.5. 20 meters is over 3, and 10 is better than 7. 18 MhZ also has a 1.2:1 SWR. SWR measured with a MFJ259 meter. The specs of the antenna are (roughly, as I'm doing this from memory) 48 feet short side, 130 long side 4:1 Balun Height around 50 feet. Coax coiled balun near house entrance Coax split just above balun for lightning arrester installation. Since I bought a new 4:1 balun at Dayton last year to replace one that I fixed a while back, I decided to replace it. Same result. I took the choke balun and lightning arrester out of the picture to isolate them, and measured from there. No difference. Coax connectors look good. So what I am left with is the coax and the antenna wire itself. Unless someone has played an *awesome* practical joke on me, the antenna dimensions haven't changed. So can coax go bad in a way that will raise the lowest SWR in the way I describe? Of course I could just replace it, but I'd like to know why. - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - |
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