Thanks Jeff.  OK, idea 1. and 2. are basically shot down in flames.  Idea 3. I 
can handle.   Again the question, if I use the original harness how do I 
terminate the connector where the lower section joined the upper.  Just weather 
proof it ??

Answer to your last comment is "no"  All my antennas are mounted on 2" GI pipe, 
bracketed to the side of the house, that run from the ground to approx. 5' 
above the roof line (25'+/-).   My site is my house located on top of a small 
mountain (2750'AMSL) roughly 1000' above average surrounding terrain.  I also 
have covenents to deal with (no towers).  Average coverage has been approx. 40+ 
miles where not blocked by higher terrain from my NW to NE.   Roger on the 
gravity connection bit on the 2 have but a 3/8"-1/2"SS bolt thru the joint 
would solve that problem. 
--
Doug   
N3DAB/WPRX486/WPJL709

---- Jeff DePolo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

=============
> 1. Mounting the dipoles and harness from a UHF DB420 on the same mast 
> as a VHF DB224, or vice versa. (UHF and VHF antennas on the same 
> mast) 

There will be a lot of interaction between the two.  I wouldn't do this.
You'd also likely need extra filtering on the ground between the VHF and UHF
repeaters since the coupling between antennas will be very high.
 
> 2. Mounting the dipoles and harness from a DB420 on the same mast of 
> an existing DB420.(2-DB420 UHF antennas on the same mast)

Really bad idea.  At that point, you may as well just use one antenna and a
combiner/multicoupler at the bottom - you'd likely need almost the same
amount of filtering with the two antennas "separated" on the same mast
because there will be so much coupling.
 
> 3. Taking an existing DB420 antenna and feeding the upper and lower 
> halves with separate feedlines to make 2-6 Db antennas on the same 
> mast. The lower harness section would be replaced with with the upper 
> harness section from a junk antenna. 

Better idea.  This used to be order-able as a DB420D, which was really two
DB408's on the same mast, one stacked above the other, with the feeders for
both antennas terminating at the bottom.  The isolation between antennas was
something like 30 dB, so again, you'll still need adequate filtering
downstairs.
 
> If any of the above ideas are practical this would allow me to recoup 
> some additonal mounting positions or at the least reduce the clutter 
> of antennas I have now.

Can you mount two antennas on the same mount, one rightside-up, and the
other inverted?  If you do this, be careful if you invert-mount a DB420.
The mechanical connection in the center relies somewhat on gravity to keep
the two halves together; if you invert-mount, gravity is working against
you.

                                        --- Jeff WN3A


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