If you're looking for a relatively compact six meter beam antenna, consider a 
three element quad.

Dimensions are available at http://www2.mmae.ucf.edu/~ssd/ham/quadcalc.html, 
which has a Java calculator for various quads, based on formulae developed by 
the legendary antenna guru,  L. B. Cebik, W4RNL, SK.

I think the three-element quad has by far the most bang for the buck (gain vs. 
size) for a single six meter antenna.  Free-space gain on Cebik's "high gain 3 
element" design is 9.34 dB on a boom of approximately 8 feet, or 0.4 WL. It has 
impedance at resonance of 55 ohms, which means it's a piece of cake to match to 
the transmitter. Since the quad is a balanced antenna, you do need a choke 
balun to restrict current flow in the coax shield. (I use the Elecraft balun 
kit.)

For comparison, a 2 element quad, with a boom length of about one meter, has 
only 7.07 dB gain, and although the four element quad gives you an additional 
0.8 dB gain with the additional element, it comes at a high price -- the boom 
is almost 30 feet long!

For a Yagi to achieve gain similar to a three-element quad, you need to double 
the boom length.  If you look at the marvelous spreadsheet that VE7BQH posted a 
bit earlier, you'll see that single Yagis of about the same boom length as the 
three-element quad offer free space gain of only about 5.5 to 6.5 dB, and Yagis 
with about 9.5dB have boom lengths of roughly 1.1 wavelengths, more thn twice 
as long as needed for a comparable gain quad. 

A quad can be configured for either horizontal polarization (for SSB) or 
vertical (for FM), depending on whether you feed it on the bottom or side. For 
ease in mounting the feed point balun and cable, I position my quad as a 
"diamond" with the spreaders pointed vertical and horizontal, and the wires at 
45 degree angles. With the feed point at the bottom, this antenna has 
horizontal polarization, which is the setup I use for weak signal SSB work. (My 
computer modeling shows that at antenna heights of roughly 6 meters above 
ground, the "diamond" configuration very slightly improves antenna performance 
relative to having the spreaders at 445 degree angle and the elements aligned 
horizontally and vertically.

I have sightly modified Cebik's design and created a 3 element six meter quad 
with slightly more gain (9.56 db) and even better SWR of 1.05:1 (51.2 ohms +j 
2.2) with the antenna cut for 50.130 mHz resonant frequency to center on the 
frequencies most used in VHF contesting. Here's are key measurments for my 
50.130 mHz quad antenna:

Dimensions:     Radiator spreader 1.082 meters, position 0.00
                Reflector spreader 1.16 meters, position -1.02 meters
                Director spreader  1.05 meters, position +1.50 meters
                total boom length 2.52 meters (8.25 feet) total wire needed 
about 75 feet. 

Real-world (not free-space) performance is outstanding. Positioning the antenna 
6 meters or more above ground is ideal, and provides a maximum gain of about 
14.5 to 15 dB at a takeoff angle of 10 to 30 degrees, depending on height (the 
higher, the better).        

Construction methods are readily available online from many sources, or you can 
email me offline if you'd like details on how i built mine. You can make the 
boom from any material, but the spreaders must be non-conductive for RF (which 
eliminates metal unless you use insulators to connect shorter segments) and 
also eliminates carbon fiber shafts. DI was surprised to learn, when 
researching this antenna, that carbon fiber is basically an insulator for DC, 
but a good conductor of RF.) 

I also have a web page under construction on this antenna, located at: 
http://web.me.com/lewphelps/K6LMP/6_meter_quad.html.

BTW, if you're really serious about 6 meter work, you'll want to invest in 
Elecraft's  PA-6 6 meter pre-amp, since the receiver design for the K3 is great 
for lower bands, but has less than optimal gain on 6 meters. You'll also want 
to get the transverter/receive antenna module for easy attachment of the PA-6. 
Definitely worthwhile.   But a really good antenna is essential, too. 
 
Lew K6LMP

On Mar 17, 2010, at 11:18 PM, Gary Smith wrote:

> I find I have a place for a 6 meter beam. I don't have one but would like to 
> make one if feasible. Does anyone know of good plans for a 6 meter beam that 
> would be realistic to make? 
> 
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