Hi all,

I've been using an MFJ-1820T telescoping 20-meter whip for a few months. 
Considering its length (48"), results have been excellent. I typically use it 
with the KX3 on a picnic table at 15 W (with an external battery), or hand-held 
at 3 to 5 W (internal battery). 

During the ARRL DX contest I worked many countries in CW and RTTY modes, and 
have also had a number of longer QSOs on 20-meter SSB. Of course at these power 
levels, with an electrically short whip, good band conditions can't hurt. 

I prefer a 25' or so wire-in-a-tree antenna when there's time. But when I need 
a quick deployment antenna that weighs very little, I pull out the 1820T. Note 
that you *must* use at least one counterpose wire. More than one helps, but all 
of the QSOs I described were made with a single 13'-long wire laid out on the 
ground. With no ground wire, you'll be down some 15 to 20 dB in transmit mode.

Since the 20-meter results were so good, I also bought the whips for 40, 17, 
15, and 10 meters. 40 meters is a rough ride at 48", but I was still able to 
check into daytime SSB nets all over the west coast running 10 W. On the higher 
bands, results improve as you go higher in frequency. I worked a few JAs on 15 
meter SSB running just 1 watt. 

A traditional problem with such antennas is that the the SWR can sometimes be 
unexpectedly high, requiring that you micro-adjust the telescoping length 
and/or adjust the length of the counterpoise wire. This is completely 
unnecessary if you have an auto-tuner available. In particular, the KX3's ATU 
can quickly match any of these whips over their full target band. In a pinch 
the ATU can also match a given whip on adjacent bands. In the DX contest 
mentioned I tuned up the 20-meter whip on 17 and 15 meters as well, and made a 
few Q's there, despite the losses due to off-resonance operation.

These whips can handle a surprising amount of power. They're rated to 25 W, but 
I ran 50 W through the 20-meter version for several minutes without damaging 
it. Some other compact whips I've tried overheated quickly even at 10 W, 
including some of the Maldol models. When this happens, the SWR goes up and 
stays up until the coil cools down. 

Caveat: Always use a full-size antenna when possible. But if you've just 
crested a new hill and only have a couple of minutes to see if the RF really is 
greener on the other side, this is an excellent choice.

73,
Wayne
N6KR


______________________________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:[email protected]

This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
Message delivered to [email protected]

Reply via email to