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#1
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Hi
We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? Is the fact that the dipole is still too low and close to the guy wires ( but not touching) our problem? Any suggestions please?? Thank you. Bob |
#2
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![]() "Bob" wrote in message ... Hi We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? If you want multi-band operation, then yes, you have to forget the balun, or put multiple dipoles on the output lugs. __ Steve KI5YG .. |
#3
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![]() Bob wrote: Hi We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? Is the fact that the dipole is still too low and close to the guy wires ( but not touching) our problem? Bob, the antenna as you describe it is pretty much *for* 80 meters. If you want to tune the thing on multiple bands, and I'm assuming that you want it for the Ham frequencies, you will want to replace the coax and balun with ladder line, and use a tuner to match the impedence with your radio. - Mike KB3EIA - |
#4
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Hi Steven
Thank you for your response to my problem. Any suggestion? What you say is that I would be better off without that 1:1 balun? Yes, now I have it at 66feet each leg for a total of 132 feet but now it is not at the best height but kinda sagging and lopping where it is but off the ground and about 2 feet above the roof and other obstacles. I also have it presently close to steel guy wires and the tower itself. What would be my problem then here now? You believe it is my balun? I was hoping to get this up there and then leave it. All this climbing is difficult. Do you believe that once I get it up there, with the coax, with the dipole, no balun, do you think that would allow me better results with a good antenna tuner? Any advice is greatly appreciated. Thank you BOb " Stephen Cowell" wrote in message m... "Bob" wrote in message ... Hi We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? If you want multi-band operation, then yes, you have to forget the balun, or put multiple dipoles on the output lugs. __ Steve KI5YG . |
#5
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Hi, Thank you for your response. I do not have ladder line and only have the
coax basically. Is it acceptable for good results to simply use the coax and then split it out to each direction of the copper wire? And not use the 1:1 balun? I was hoping to simply get the dipole in the air and leave it and simply tune it at the transmitter to acceptable SWR and go from there. Now I only get good SWR on the 80meters because of the length it is cut at. I was hoping also to use the dipole with the tuner on 10, 15, 20 and 40. Is this possible? The tuner is good and I know I will lose the power to the tuner but would still get to use the other bands when needed. Any more advice is greatly appreciated. thanks Bob "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... Bob wrote: Hi We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? Is the fact that the dipole is still too low and close to the guy wires ( but not touching) our problem? Bob, the antenna as you describe it is pretty much *for* 80 meters. If you want to tune the thing on multiple bands, and I'm assuming that you want it for the Ham frequencies, you will want to replace the coax and balun with ladder line, and use a tuner to match the impedence with your radio. - Mike KB3EIA - |
#6
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Bob, try it without the balun. In most cases, a balun isn't needed except
to reduce TVI-type problems. Also, if you're looking for multi-band performance, consider trimming about 30 feet off the antenna - 102 to about 120 feet tends to be more tunable. You might also consider changing over from coax to twin lead, if you can work the logistics... 73, Mike KI6PR El Rancho R.F., CA "Bob" wrote Hi We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? Is the fact that the dipole is still too low and close to the guy wires ( but not touching) our problem? Any suggestions please?? Thank you. Bob |
#7
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Bob wrote:
Hi We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? The antenna is a non-resonant length on most of the other HF bands. You cannot afford the SWR power loss when feeding it with coax on any band except 80m. Take a look on my web page how I solved the all-HF-band problem using essentially the same type of dipole. You need to feed such an antenna with twinlead, window-line, ladder-line, or open-wire line. That moves the balun to the hamshack. 100 ft. of ladder-line is close to optimum. Is the fact that the dipole is still too low and close to the guy wires ( but not touching) our problem? That may be part of your problem but not the biggest part. -- 73, Cecil, http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#8
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Bob wrote:
Hi Steven Thank you for your response to my problem. Any suggestion? What you say is that I would be better off without that 1:1 balun? Yes, now I have it at 66feet each leg for a total of 132 feet but now it is not at the best height but kinda sagging and lopping where it is but off the ground and about 2 feet above the roof and other obstacles. I also have it presently close to steel guy wires and the tower itself. What would be my problem then here now? The problem is the coax. You believe it is my balun? I was hoping to get this up there and then leave it. All this climbing is difficult. Do you believe that once I get it up there, with the coax, with the dipole, no balun, do you think that would allow me better results with a good antenna tuner? Any advice is greatly appreciated. Feeding your dipole with ladder-line moves all the matching problems to the hamshack where you don't have to climb anything to solve them. Try the following configuration and get back to us on any remaining problems. XMTR--tuner--1:1 balun/choke--100 ft. 450 ohm ladder-line---132 ft. dipole This configuration will allow multi-band operation on most of the HF ham bands. The problems you will have with a couple of bands are solvable. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#9
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Bob wrote:
Hi, Thank you for your response. I do not have ladder line and only have the coax basically. The coax *IS* the problem. If you don't like to climb, you are going to have to replace the coax with something like 450 ohm ladder-line. 100 ft. of such ladder-line costs about $17. One other possible solution is to install an autotuner at the antenna feedpoint but that is a pain to do. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#10
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In article , "Bob"
writes: We have put together a dipole, each leg is 66 feet. We put a 1:1 balun and it is running about 60 feet of 50 ohm coax. Presently it is about half way up the tower it is intended for so we could check the SWR before getting it up to the highest point. Presently each leg has some lags and dips, no major bends but it is just hanging there, over some bushes and the entire thing is over top of the house, and not touching anything but is very close to some steel guy wires (uninsulated). What you have is the classic dipole for 80 meters. Now we can only tune this down to a useable SWR on the 80m band. On all other bands we cannot tune it down to a safe operating range. We are using a good antenna tuner but cannot get anything useable except for 80m. Here we are able to tune the SWR right down. That is normal behavior. Questions??? Would we be better without that balun? No. Is the fact that the dipole is still too low and close to the guy wires ( but not touching) our problem? No. Any suggestions please?? The problem is this: The antenna you describe is approximately: one half-wavelength long on 80 meters two half-wavelengths long on 40 meters four half-wavelengths long on 20 meters six half-wavelengths long on 15 meters etc. Such a center-fed dipole antenna has a feed point impedance that is fairly "low" (that is, under about 100 ohms) on frequencies where it is an *odd* number of half-wavelengths. On frequencies where it is an *even* number of half wavelengths, the feed point impedance is very high - greater than 1000 ohms. The 1:1 balun and 50 ohm coax you are using are low-impedance devices, so they work fine on 80 meters. But on the other bands, they do not work with the high impedance of the antenna. A tuner at the shack end of the coax cannot make up for the enormous mismatch at the antenna end. Even if it could, the loss in the coax from being operated at such a high SWR would make such a system very inefficient. There are several possible solutions: 1) Use a different transmission line (high impedance balanced line) and eliminate the balun. This requires a balanced antenna tuner and the mechanical difficulties of using non-coax transmission lines 2) Use a different sort of dipole that is an odd number of half-wavelengths on the desired bands. One form of this dipole is the "trap dipole", in which tuned circuits (traps) electrically alter the effective antenna length. A really good information source is W4RNL's (Cebik) website. Goole on his name or call to find it. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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