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#1
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Hi
I have a 50 ft tower just ready to throw up something to operate. Cost is the problem but I have a lot of parts to build. I want to put up a dipole (I have a manual all band tuner) and my question is should feed it with ladder line or feed it with coax and then run each leg about 68 ft . Second idea is I have an old aluminum omni antenna that used to have 3 traps within it, however at that height it will come down quickly as this antenna is meant to be on the ground (no ground planes) so I want to make this omni as long as practically possible and tune it to utilize it as best possible. Any suggestions? This is really all I have to work with. Only want to climb this thing a couple times and hope its good for the winter. Thanks 73s Ron |
#2
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" Ron" wrote in message
... Hi I have a 50 ft tower just ready to throw up something to operate. Cost is the problem but I have a lot of parts to build. I want to put up a dipole (I have a manual all band tuner) and my question is should feed it with ladder line or feed it with coax and then run each leg about 68 ft . Second idea is I have an old aluminum omni antenna that used to have 3 traps within it, however at that height it will come down quickly as this antenna is meant to be on the ground (no ground planes) so I want to make this omni as long as practically possible and tune it to utilize it as best possible. Any suggestions? This is really all I have to work with. Only want to climb this thing a couple times and hope its good for the winter. A commercially built Yagi will usually work out of the box on a tower if you measure carefully. A G5RV will work without much fiddling. The vertical won't be worth anything on the tower. If you want to shunt feed the tower and extend it another 17 ft. you could probably do well on 40 and 30 meters in the wee hours of the morning. You should post in RRA Antenna newsgroup, as there are experts who will have a lot of detail and time on their hands and are fun to watch bicker. |
#3
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JB wrote:
" Ron" wrote in message ... Hi I have a 50 ft tower just ready to throw up something to operate. Cost is the problem but I have a lot of parts to build. I want to put up a dipole (I have a manual all band tuner) and my question is should feed it with ladder line or feed it with coax and then run each leg about 68 ft . Second idea is I have an old aluminum omni antenna that used to have 3 traps within it, however at that height it will come down quickly as this antenna is meant to be on the ground (no ground planes) so I want to make this omni as long as practically possible and tune it to utilize it as best possible. Any suggestions? This is really all I have to work with. Only want to climb this thing a couple times and hope its good for the winter. A commercially built Yagi will usually work out of the box on a tower if you measure carefully. A G5RV will work without much fiddling. The vertical won't be worth anything on the tower. If you want to shunt feed the tower and extend it another 17 ft. you could probably do well on 40 and 30 meters in the wee hours of the morning. You should post in RRA Antenna newsgroup, as there are experts who will have a lot of detail and time on their hands and are fun to watch bicker. While putting a vertical on a tower seems a waste of a tower, verticals DO work better on a tower if they are of the half wave length center feed kind, such as the GAP Titan. I have mine on a short tower against the house so that the base of the antenna is just above the roof line. The antenna is on a tilt over mount so I can lower against the roof whenever a tropical cyclone blows through here. The antenna works better up 25 feet than ground mounted (and the kids can't trip over it in the back yard). |
#4
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A 4btv trap vertical or the like would be a different matter, requiring some
fiddling. A Yagi and (or) G5RV would require a minimum of fiddling. A ladder line fed homemade G5RV in inverted vee would be the least expensive I could think of. A used 3 element Yagis can be cleaned up and re-used later.. The trap vertical that was mentioned would probably be a real hassle to tune-up on the tower. |
#5
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JB wrote:
A 4btv trap vertical or the like would be a different matter, requiring some fiddling. A Yagi and (or) G5RV would require a minimum of fiddling. A ladder line fed homemade G5RV in inverted vee would be the least expensive I could think of. A used 3 element Yagis can be cleaned up and re-used later.. The trap vertical that was mentioned would probably be a real hassle to tune-up on the tower. The GAP Titan can be dumped out of the box, assembled (use a tape measure to get everything as per the manual) and put up without ANY fooling around. You *MIGHT* have to make a minor adjustment to get the 80 and 40 meter bands right with the lowest SWR centered in the middle of the band segment that you operate most, but mine came out perfect using the factory directions. |
#6
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![]() "Kenneth Scharf" wrote in message ... JB wrote: A 4btv trap vertical or the like would be a different matter, requiring some fiddling. A Yagi and (or) G5RV would require a minimum of fiddling. A ladder line fed homemade G5RV in inverted vee would be the least expensive I could think of. A used 3 element Yagis can be cleaned up and re-used later.. The trap vertical that was mentioned would probably be a real hassle to tune-up on the tower. The GAP Titan can be dumped out of the box, assembled (use a tape measure to get everything as per the manual) and put up without ANY fooling around. You *MIGHT* have to make a minor adjustment to get the 80 and 40 meter bands right with the lowest SWR centered in the middle of the band segment that you operate most, but mine came out perfect using the factory directions. You are telling me that the measurements are the same for tower mounting? |
#7
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Thank you kindly for all the info
I have a lot of wire, can make any dipole, I have this 50ft tower that I want to make a dipole and omni on the top. The omni I want to be tunable so I can use it on other bands such as marine band, to communicate with my boat I have the manual tuner with reflected power measurements, so that is ok. I want to know what is better, the dipole fed with coax or fed with ladder line. The coax will run out the house, past the alumninum siding and be taped to the tower, the ladder line I can run out the house, past the same aluminum siding but can keep away from the tower about 4 feet until it reaches the top where the dipole will split it and run the longest length I can (I have the room) so that I can utilize all the bands with my tuner. All suggestions and advice are excellent and I hope to hear and learn more thanks 73 "JB" wrote in message ... "Kenneth Scharf" wrote in message ... JB wrote: A 4btv trap vertical or the like would be a different matter, requiring some fiddling. A Yagi and (or) G5RV would require a minimum of fiddling. A ladder line fed homemade G5RV in inverted vee would be the least expensive I could think of. A used 3 element Yagis can be cleaned up and re-used later.. The trap vertical that was mentioned would probably be a real hassle to tune-up on the tower. The GAP Titan can be dumped out of the box, assembled (use a tape measure to get everything as per the manual) and put up without ANY fooling around. You *MIGHT* have to make a minor adjustment to get the 80 and 40 meter bands right with the lowest SWR centered in the middle of the band segment that you operate most, but mine came out perfect using the factory directions. You are telling me that the measurements are the same for tower mounting? |
#8
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A fan dipole has multiple dipoles with the same feed using spreader
insulators at the end of each shorter dipole. Full size 40 meter dipole usually works on 15 with a tuner as it is not far from a 3/4 wave, and 80 might work on 10. I always wanted a full size cage dipole for 80 and 75. This has several wires for broad band operation. HF Discone is another interesting broadband antenna. You could use the tower as a support but takes up some space. Good luck |
#9
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On Fri, 11 Sep 2009 00:15:23 -0400, " Ron"
wrote: I have a 50 ft tower just ready to throw up something to operate. Cost is the problem but I have a lot of parts to build. I want to put up a dipole (I have a manual all band tuner) and my question is should feed it with ladder line or feed it with coax and then run each leg about 68 ft . I have a single tree in the middle at my site and I use it as the feedpoint for an inverted-V antenna. Each segment is about 20 m long from the feed point for 3.5 MHz operation. Also there are two 10 m segments in different directions for 7 (and 21 MHz). There are some ferrite toroids on the coax close to the feed point as a current balun. I also experimented with two 5 m segments from the same feed point into slightly different directions for 14 MHz operation. Unfortunately, it was quite hard to find the suitable length for these segments using any SWR measurements and by using a noise bridge, I had to extend the segments with nearly a meter, in order to get the SWR down to operate without a tuner. Of course this varies from site to site. Paul OH3LWR |
#10
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JB wrote:
"Kenneth Scharf" wrote in message ... JB wrote: A 4btv trap vertical or the like would be a different matter, requiring some fiddling. A Yagi and (or) G5RV would require a minimum of fiddling. A ladder line fed homemade G5RV in inverted vee would be the least expensive I could think of. A used 3 element Yagis can be cleaned up and re-used later.. The trap vertical that was mentioned would probably be a real hassle to tune-up on the tower. The GAP Titan can be dumped out of the box, assembled (use a tape measure to get everything as per the manual) and put up without ANY fooling around. You *MIGHT* have to make a minor adjustment to get the 80 and 40 meter bands right with the lowest SWR centered in the middle of the band segment that you operate most, but mine came out perfect using the factory directions. You are telling me that the measurements are the same for tower mounting? I'd have to dig up the instruction manual to see what they have to say on that. However I do remember assembling it according to the measurements given in the manual and the antenna worked fine mounted with the bottom at eye level with me standing on roof. The antenna was mounted on a mast strapped to the side of the house. I now have the antenna mounted at the same height, but using the GAP tiltover mount hardware attached to a short length of Rohn #25 tower against the side of the house. I don't think the GAP Titan is very sensitive to height above ground, at least as far as tuning is concerned. Angle of radiation is probably another story.... |
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