Copperweld is "nasty" stuff IMHO. If you can support it so it will not flex, you can tension it greater than plain copper. But it 'remembers' the coils it had on the wire spool and will spring back to those coils if allowed to remain free and untensioned. If you pull it while it has a kink in it, the game is over, that kink will become a spot for failure.

That is part of why I prefer hard drawn copper wire for my antennas. I use stranded #14. The stranded will endure more flexing than solid wire, and will not kink as easily as copperweld.

Any antenna wire will be subject to some flexing (from wind if nothing else), so plan on that - that is especially true if you are using trees as supports. Even though you may have a system that allows the trees to move in the wind without stressing the antenna wire, there will still be flexing of the wire when those trees move.

Those reasons are why I use stranded hard drawn copper wire. All my antennas are resonant. For those who are using non-resonant antennas, stranded copper wire (not hard drawn) will usually suffice because some elongation of the wire is not likely to hurt anything.

So the bottom line answer is "it all depends" on your planned antennas and how much variation you can tolerate.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 2/10/2016 6:42 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
On Wed,2/10/2016 10:37 AM, Nels Nelsen wrote:
multistrand copper coated steel is longer lasting.

Not in my experience -- my neighbor hung a dipole strung with copperweld (what you're describing, I think) in some trees with tension on it and with pulleys and weights to deal with tree sway. It was on the ground a day or two later -- the stuff was quite brittle, and simply broke.

I really hate copperweld, and would never consider using it.

Just remember this when you start trouble shooting strange swr in a couple of years. Copper breaks so easy.Go to the Wireman.com for some good wire.

The wireman is a decent vendor, but I buy my antenna wire from big box stores.


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