I am trying to get my ham shack back together after Hurricane Katrina
destroyed it. Bought the above anatenna. I went out back today to lay it out on the ground trying to avoid the trees. The best position still had a tall water oak, about 12" in diameter about 6 inches from the antenna, about 20' from the balun, on the long side. It's 136 feet long, about 100 on one side, the remainder on the other. Would it be worth trying to move the balun(feedpoint) closer to this tree? Just how much will this affect my antenna? Yes, there are trees further away from it, I have a wooded backyard. So much for an open field. It runs NE to SW. Thanks. Bill Striegel KE5UD Ocean Springs, MS _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
Bill writes: > I am trying to get my ham shack back together after Hurricane Katrina > destroyed it. Bought the above anatenna. I went out back today to lay > it out on the ground trying to avoid the trees. The best position still > had a tall water oak, about 12" in diameter about 6 inches from the > antenna, about 20' from the balun, on the long side. It's 136 feet > long, about 100 on one side, the remainder on the other. Would it be > worth trying to move the balun(feedpoint) closer to this tree? Just how > much will this affect my antenna? Yes, there are trees further away > from it, I have a wooded backyard. So much for an open field. It runs > NE to SW. Hi Bill, I don't have direct experience of the BuxCom 806136 or 806137, but I have used OCF dipoles pretty much exclusively since 1997 including a Fritzel FD4, two Buckmasters, and four of my own design using homebrew baluns. All of those except possibly the Fritzel would stand up just fine in the situation you describe -- the Fritzel lacked adequate feedline common-mode choking and it was extraordinarily finicky about installation. I have put up my 135-ft OCF field dipole (with a 4:1 current balun and multi-turn feedline choke) in much worse situations than the one you describe, and it still pulled in stations as well as any dipole or doublet of equivalent height and length. This has been borne out in A/B comparisons with a 135-ft doublet at a similar height located in the same pasture. Your cypress tree is located near the high-current region of the antenna and it shouldn't (or wouldn't with my antennas, the Fritzel excepting) cause any noticeable change in resonant frequency nor would it likely increase the minimum SWR you can obtain. I would be surprised if it caused any noticeable attenuation, either, though that would be the likely failure mode, if one exists. If you do have problems with detuning, here's the troubleshooting drill: Nearly all of OCF dipoles' reputation for terrain sensitivity is caused by inadequate feedline common-mode choking, usually owing to an inadequat 4:1 or 6:1 balun (such as a voltage balun or a lousy current balun) at the feedpoint. If you can sniff RF on the feedline with an RF ammeter, or especially if grasping or moving the feedline changes SWR, then a good 1:1 current unun located just below the feedpoint will likely restore good behavior. If the Buxcom balun is as good as reputed, this should not be a problem with your antenna. Although the OCFs offer good SWR on several bands, I always hit the KAT1 or KAT2 before operating. This is by way of adding a little harmonic suppression as possible and achieving a conjugate match at the transceiver for optimum power transfer. On most bands, it probably makes no perceptible difference, but I do it anyway as a matter of good practice when using multiband antennas. Let us know how it goes. 73, Ken K3VV Coopersburg > _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
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