There are many hams who dislike antenna tuners and will go to great lengths to 
avoid having to use one, including putting up multiple antennas, trimming 
antennas inch by inch, and using elaborate matching schemes involving 
transmission lines of various lengths and Zo.

Besides the tremendous freedom a good antenna tuner gives you with regard to 
the length of your antenna, length of your feedline, type of feedline, and 
choice of operating frequency, there is one other advantage that many often 
forget and which I rarely hear explained.

I use a homebrew link-coupled balanced tuner. It's getting harder to find a 
commercially-built link-coupled unit, but the most famous example is the good 
old Johnson Matchbox which most folks are familiar with.

Anyway, the advantage I'm talking about is that when properly adjusted, a 
link-coupled tuner acts as a high-pass filter. This means that it provides 
additional rejection of AM broadcast stations in the 530 - 1710 kHz band. This 
is really important to many hams, particularly when they live close to one of 
these high-powered transmitters which are always on and have plenty 
of potential for causing problems in the receiver.

I have run simulations of my particular tuner (which is not exactly like a 
Johnson) which show that I enjoy a minimum of -30 dB of rejection at 1710 kHz 
(the closest end of the broadcast band and thus, the worst case) when I am 
tuned up on 80 meters, and -50 dB when I'm tuned on 40 meters. I have confirmed 
these numbers with measurements.

I have troublemakers at 1110 and 1300 kHz, both 50 kW only about 1.5 miles 
away. I believe they would cause me some problems if I did not have this tuner 
in the line which knocks them down by 42 and 38 dB, respectively, when I am 
operating on 80 meters. When you knock down a 50 kW signal by 40 dB, it looks 
like a mere 5 W signal!

So the next time someone complains about "lossy tuners", or having to "twirl 
dials", remind them that there is this hidden benefit to using a good 
old-fashioned, link-coupled tuner.
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