My intention was to indicate "short".

On Oct 20, 2008, at 5:56 PM, Paul Plack wrote:


Is not "no measureable resistance" the same as a short? Zero ohms is just what it should show...why would that indicate damage or defect?

----- Original Message -----
From: Jacob Suter
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 11:17 AM
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] UHF Repeater Antenna -- UPDATE

"DC Grounded", in my experience, means the center pin and the coax will show
a "dc short" when tested with a DMM.

Lightning? Corrosion? Manufacturing defect?

JS

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:Repeater-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Cort Buffington
> Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 11:29 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [Repeater-Builder] UHF Repeater Antenna -- UPDATE
>
> Folks,
>
> *Continuation of Previous Thread: UHF Repeater Antenna Discussion*
>
> We climbed the tower on Sunday and checked things with the wattmeter
> between the Feedline and the antenna.
>
> At the bottom, we were making 75 Watts at the duplexer output. At the > top, after going through 105' of LDF4.5-50A (just over 1dB of loss), a
> PolyPhaser, and a 6' jumper of RG400 (from the duplexer to the
> PolyPhaser) we were seeing 57 Watts. I show that as about 1.2 dB of
> loss, which seems quite reasonable. The F10, at the top, showed me
> about 1.5W reflected... or 1.34:1 VSWR.
>
> The antenna is a DC grounded colinear, and we showed no measurable
> (with my DMM) resistance between the center pin and outer conductor of
> the Hardline/Antenna combination.
>
> Right now, we're of the mind that the feedline is good.
>
> 73 DE N0MJS
>
> --
> Cort Buffington
> H: +1-785-838-3034
> M: +1-785-865-7206





--
Cort Buffington
H: +1-785-838-3034
M: +1-785-865-7206




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