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#1
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I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going
up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? My friend thought 5 lbs of ballest thrown over a limb would do it, but I think I'd need about 20 lbs. I'm worried about sticking 20 lbs of something or other up in the air. With my luck it would decide to fall when some little kid was under it. Neighbor lady told me no, I can't use her tree, but she is moving out in a few days anyway so I figure to hurry up and get it up so it's there before the new owner gets there. Grandfathered in so to speak. Ideas? regards, NEO. |
#2
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N9NEO wrote:
I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? My friend thought 5 lbs of ballest thrown over a limb would do it, but I think I'd need about 20 lbs. I'm worried about sticking 20 lbs of something or other up in the air. With my luck it would decide to fall when some little kid was under it. Neighbor lady told me no, I can't use her tree, but she is moving out in a few days anyway so I figure to hurry up and get it up so it's there before the new owner gets there. Grandfathered in so to speak. Ideas? regards, NEO. Will the trees flex in the wind? |
#3
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In article
, N9NEO wrote: I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? My friend thought 5 lbs of ballest thrown over a limb would do it, but I think I'd need about 20 lbs. I'm worried about sticking 20 lbs of something or other up in the air. With my luck it would decide to fall when some little kid was under it. Neighbor lady told me no, I can't use her tree, but she is moving out in a few days anyway so I figure to hurry up and get it up so it's there before the new owner gets there. Grandfathered in so to speak. Ideas? This sounds like a bad plan to me. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#4
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On Jul 4, 3:54*pm, N9NEO wrote:
I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. *One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. *I think it's going to be about 150' *long *Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? *My friend thought 5 lbs of ballest thrown over a limb would do it, but I think I'd need about 20 lbs. *I'm worried about sticking 20 lbs of something or other up in the air. *With my luck it would decide to fall when some little kid was under it. *Neighbor lady told me no, I can't use her tree, but she is moving out in a few days anyway so I figure to hurry up and get it up so it's there before the new owner gets there. *Grandfathered in so to speak. *Ideas? regards, NEO. N9NEO, ? grappling hook out of coat hanger ? ! NOT A GOOD IDEA ! http://www.flickr.com/photos/opalmirror/1641086431/ -ps- Yes - It is Easier to Ask for Forgiveness . . . Then To Get Permission ;-} 50+ Feet of 1/4" Poly/Nylon Rope up over a Tree Limb and going around the Trunk of the Tree with the Free-End Secured at the Base of the Tree. -Note- Pulley Attached to the Top-End of the Rope for Rigging the Antenna Wire and Poly/Nylon Ballast Rope and Ballast Weight. -Tip- Allows you to Raise and Lower the Antenna Wire and Poly/Nylon Ballast Rope and Ballast Weight as needed. Question - What Kind of Antenna Wire are you using ? http://www.thewireman.com/antennap.html Matching the Antenna Ballast Weight to the Wire Antenna Element : 1st - Take your ~150 Feet of Antenna Wire and coil it up. Next Weigh the Wire. Then Multiply the Weight of the Wire by Three Times (3X). 2nd - Take a Plastic Bleach Jug filled with Road Mix or Gravel to Equal Three times the Weight of the Wire. -Note- This is your starting Ballast Weight : Which should result in a relatively Horizontal [Flat] Antenna Wire with only a slight 'sag'. -Tip- If your Antenna Wire is being Whipped around on a Windy Day : You Need More Ballast Weight. Sufficient "Sag" for Wire Antenna Spans for Wind Survival http://www.vk1od.net/rigging/sag.htm -Note- # 14 AWG Insulated Copper Wire [THHN] made of 19 Strands weighs about 25 Pounds per 1000 Feet. -so- 150 Feet would weigh about 3.75 Lbs resulting in a Ballast Weight of 10~12 Lbs. 3rd - Use a Pulley at the Far-End Anchor-Point of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulley the Antenna Wire. Use a Poly/Nylon Rope that is big enough to fill the Pulley Wheel and Run Smoothly through the Pulley. http://www.qsradio.com/Antenna%20Pulley%20lg%20reg.JPG 4th - Use a Plastic Insulator at the Far-End of the Antenna Wire and use about 10~15 Feet of Poly Nylon Rope between the Insulator and the Far-End Anchor-Point (Tree); with another 10~15 of Poly Nylon Rope hanging down from the Pulley with your Ballast {Jug} attached. http://www.myinsulators.com/sluggo/i...tic-strain.jpg http://www.myinsulators.com/sluggo/i...ompression.jpg 5th - Also use a Plastic Insulator at the Radio-End of the Antenna Wire and use a minimum of 3~5 Feet of Poly/Nylon Rope between the Insulator and the Radio-End Anchor-Point (House/Tree). Question - Do you get Snow and/or Ice during Winter ? Answer - Then Triple your Ballast Weight. rigging a shortwave radio listener's (swl) antenna is a balancing act between the forces of man and the forces of nature - iane ~ RHF {pomkia} |
#5
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RHF wrote:
Pure polyester or clothesline (cotton cladded plastic) works better in sunlight. |
#6
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N9NEO wrote:
I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? Neither. The "grappling hook" is waaay too marginal to depend on and even an expensive marine block ('pulley') will eventually stop operating without maintenance, to say nothing of somebody getting beaned by the weights. I would recommend a screen door spring at each place you fasten to a tree. Go to a hardware store and find the biggest, beefiest screen door springs that you can and then give them several coats of paint for rust prevention. I've been using this method for a 140 foot dipole (made from 14 gauge insulated wire) attached to a pine tree at one end and a Norway maple at the other end; its been up continuously since 1996. tree - screw eye (or hook) - rope - spring - rope - end insulator - antenna wire Good luck! |
#7
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In article ,
Billy Burpelson wrote: N9NEO wrote: I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? Neither. The "grappling hook" is waaay too marginal to depend on and even an expensive marine block ('pulley') will eventually stop operating without maintenance, to say nothing of somebody getting beaned by the weights. I would recommend a screen door spring at each place you fasten to a tree. Go to a hardware store and find the biggest, beefiest screen door springs that you can and then give them several coats of paint for rust prevention. I've been using this method for a 140 foot dipole (made from 14 gauge insulated wire) attached to a pine tree at one end and a Norway maple at the other end; its been up continuously since 1996. tree - screw eye (or hook) - rope - spring - rope - end insulator - antenna wire You left out the last part of the setup. His tree - screw eye (or hook) - rope - spring - rope - end insulator - antenna wire - neighbors tree - insulator - rope - hanging weight - LAWSUIT Don't forget that last part. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#8
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In article ,
Dave wrote: RHF wrote: Pure polyester or clothesline (cotton cladded plastic) works better in sunlight. What about at nighttime? He will have to put it backup everyday. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#9
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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , Billy Burpelson wrote: N9NEO wrote: I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? Neither. The "grappling hook" is waaay too marginal to depend on and even an expensive marine block ('pulley') will eventually stop operating without maintenance, to say nothing of somebody getting beaned by the weights. I would recommend a screen door spring at each place you fasten to a tree. Go to a hardware store and find the biggest, beefiest screen door springs that you can and then give them several coats of paint for rust prevention. I've been using this method for a 140 foot dipole (made from 14 gauge insulated wire) attached to a pine tree at one end and a Norway maple at the other end; its been up continuously since 1996. tree - screw eye (or hook) - rope - spring - rope - end insulator - antenna wire You left out the last part of the setup. His tree - screw eye (or hook) - rope - spring - rope - end insulator - antenna wire - neighbors tree - insulator - rope - hanging weight - LAWSUIT Don't forget that last part. -- Telamon Ventura, California Can the hanging weight(s) be tethered to the tree by a short length of rope as an emergency catch-all ? Like wearinf both belt AND suspenders. k35454. |
#10
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I second the recommendation on using heavy duty springs--I also had several
feet of wire strung between a building and a Norway maple that moved in the wind and never had a problem. "Billy Burpelson" wrote in message ... N9NEO wrote: I'm in the middle of putting up a longwire antenna. One end is going up in a tree in my back yard and the other end is going into one of my neighbors trees. I think it's going to be about 150' long Should I use a counter weight at my neighbor's end or try and fashion some sort of grappling hook out of coat hanger and get it tangled up in the tree? Neither. The "grappling hook" is waaay too marginal to depend on and even an expensive marine block ('pulley') will eventually stop operating without maintenance, to say nothing of somebody getting beaned by the weights. I would recommend a screen door spring at each place you fasten to a tree. Go to a hardware store and find the biggest, beefiest screen door springs that you can and then give them several coats of paint for rust prevention. I've been using this method for a 140 foot dipole (made from 14 gauge insulated wire) attached to a pine tree at one end and a Norway maple at the other end; its been up continuously since 1996. tree - screw eye (or hook) - rope - spring - rope - end insulator - antenna wire Good luck! |
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