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Re: [Antennaware] Help! Which One

To: <antennaware@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Antennaware] Help! Which One
From: "K9AY" <k9ay@k9ay.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Sep 2009 09:33:00 -0500
List-post: <antennaware@contesting.com">mailto:antennaware@contesting.com>
>....
> I also have a 65 foot vertical made from 3/4 inch copper water pipe at 
> ground level. It has no radials, only a ground rod, and it well...sucks, I 
> hardly ever use it unless I don't want to make a contact. I do think 
> though that if I invested the time into putting a number of radials down, 
> the vertical would begin to work better. I highly doubt though that it 
> will ever outperform the zepp antennas.
>....
>
Paul (KG7HF)
________

Radials for verticals make all the difference in the world, just like height 
does for horizontal antennas. Before writing off verticals, note one of my 
experiences:

In 1985 after moving to Colorado, the first antenna installed was a 40M 
rotatable dipole, but only at about 35-40 feet. It was dead ... like Paul's 
vertical with no radials. Radiating straight up is no better than putting 
power into lossy ground.

I re-arranged the antenna as a classic ground plane with a 1/4-wave vertical 
section starting at 25 feet and three sloping radials. This was a fine 
one-element antenna. Later, I added a second ground plane spaced about 165 
deg. with five phasing settings. For DX, the array was only slightly behind 
other local hams with 2 element beams at 70 feet.

I might note that the array was designed with the help of MININEC on an 
early Compaq PC -- 4.77 MHz CPU clock, and one of the floppy disks upgraded 
to a 5 MB hard drive!

73, Gary
K9AY



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