buy the leo pack by m2 from amsat.  you get a discount. i have had the leo pack 
since they came out.  if you would like to buy my old sat antennas, 15x2  70cm 
circular polarized and 11x2 2m circular polarized i am willing to let them go.  

73...bruce

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 9, 2020, at 1:05 PM, Neal Naumann via BVARC <[email protected]> wrote:


This is something I once started and haven't finished yet..

Go to m2inc.com.  Download the assembly manual for the 436CP16 and the 2MCPA.  
These are nice antennas, but I don't have a $600 antenna budget.  The manual 
gives you all the dimensions.  I picked up a few TV antennas from the curb 
around the neighborhood.  The elements are much thicker than the M2 elements, 
but that's OK.  The old TV antennas yielded a usable boom for the 436MHz array. 
 I drilled out the rivets to remove the existing elements.  I drilled holes 
slightly larger than the harvested elements in the boom per M2 dimensions (you 
might want to used a drill press here).  I have cut all the elements per M2 
dimensions (get a cheap digital caliper) and plan to put a piece of heat shrink 
on the center of the elements and then epoxy them in place on the boom.  I 
haven't quite figured out yet how I will do the driven elements yet, but it 
will be close to M2's method except possibly a plastic project box at the feed 
points.  if you get this far, you will have to do some calculating to make a 
phasing harness with some 75-ohm coax.  The two feed points are physically 90 
degrees apart so nothing fancy there - just an easy way to get circular 
polarization.  I plan to do about the same for the 2-meter antenna, but I need 
to "harvest" some more TV antennas.  Once upon a time, nice diameter aluminum 
welding rods were available at the hardware store and were 36 inches long.  36 
inches is not quite enough for the low end of 2 meters, but maybe two could be 
spliced together.  The TV antenna plastic element to boom mount might also be 
recycled and a jumper put across to join the two halves of the element.

Of course with this satellite array, you would need an az/el rotator and 
tracking program, and that's another story, but you don't need to spend $1000 
on that either.

Good luck!
73

Neal N5EN
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