Glenn,

That voltage is very good, so rule that out.

There seems to be a lot of confusion in the ham community when dealing with RF in the Shack - a very common response is "my equipment is well grounded" That grounding may be fine for AC mains grounding, static grounding, and perhaps even some help with lightning protection, BUT it usually does nothing for the RF in the shack problem. The wire to earth has some length and that length is part of the reason it does not work. Think of an 8 foot connection to the ground point - the connection point to earth is at a low impedance, but at the shack end it is quite a high impedance at 28 MHz because it is 1/4 wave long - that wire acts like a transmission line or as an antenna element to any RF that may be on shack equipment. It will have some impedance to ground at any frequency - I just use 8 feet and 28 MHz as a convenient example. About the only way to eliminate RF in the shack is to keep it off the feedline shield in the first place, and that means use of common mode current chokes. The 'balun' at the antenna feedpoint may not be doing the job effectively, or if the feedline is not arranged perpendicular to the antenna for at least 1/4 wavelength, the feedline may couple with the radiator and actually pick up RF. K9YC has provided information on effective common mode chokes in his "A Ham's Guide to RFI". You may need to install such a choke not only at the antenna feedpoint, but also at the point where the feedline enters the shack. I recommend that approach to anyone who uses an OCF antenna.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 6/1/2014 11:54 PM, WA7SPY wrote:
Hi Don,
Thank you for the information and input about OCF antennas. I did a measurement 
of the supply voltage to the KXPA100. here is what I Measure with my Fluke 77 
meter:

The voltage measurement was taken at the supply power plug from the amp that 
plugs into the KX3 to power it. I have the internal batteries installed in the 
KX3 so doing the test was easy. I am using an Alinco DM-330 MVP power supply 
with a very short cable run the the KXPA100. The supply voltage reads 15.1 
volts without the amp or KX3 transmitting. With the power setting on the KX3 
set to max 110 watts. When the KX3 is keyed and the amp is active I measure 
14.6 volts. The voltage drop is not that big in my opinion.

I have a 10 foot ground round sunk all the way down with a heavy braided cable 
less than a 6 foot run to a 1/4 inch thick brass 8x8 inch plate. I then have 
braided jumpers going to the KX3 and KXPA100 less than 8 inches from the brass 
plate to my equipment.

What else should I do or look for? I have to say my Carolina Windom performs 
extremely well!

Thank you,
Glenn WA7SPY

Glenn Maclean

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