-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

It reminds me of the verticals Gotham made in the 1950s. 
 
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But it's very different.

The Gotham verticals were just 22 feet of tubing, some mounting straps, and a big custom-made coil of B& W miniductor. The only difference between the various models was how big a coil they sent.

You supplied the feedline, mounting, some hardware, a ground or counterpoise, and a weatherproof cover for the coil.

The way the Gotham verticals worked was that you connected the coil between the bottom of the 22 foot radiator and ground/counterpoise. Then you connected the coax braid to ground.

You also needed to tap the coax center conductor onto the coil, and to short out turns at the top of the coil.

The trick was that with the right number of turns shorted out at the top of the coil, and the center conductor tapped on at the right spot, you'd get a low SWR on the frequency of your choice. Of course if you QSYd, you had to go change the taps and shorting jumper. Since the coil was at the base of the antenna, that could be convenient - maybe.

Depending on how good the ground connection was, and what band you were using, performance could range from great to awful. 22 feet is about 5/8 wave on 10 meters, too.

The BB7W doesn't work like that. There's some sort of magic, nonadjustable network inside the feedpoint device. I suspect it has a near-unity power factor.....


73 de Jim, N2EY




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