Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-21 Thread WILLIS COOKE
Kurt, 20 to 30 feet of RG-213 will give you an acceptable loss even on 6 meters 
and almost none on the lower bands.  I have over 200 feet of RG-213 feeding my 
SteppIR and it works pretty well on 6 meters.  I feed my L with about 125 feet 
of RG-8X and it works very well on 160 and 80.  Study the difference between a 
balun and an unun.  You feed a balanced antenna with a balun (balanced antenna 
to unbalanced coax feed) and an unbalanced antenna with an unun or unbalanced 
to unbalanced.  Neither is a magic device and both are just transformers.  
Vendors enclose them in PVC to keep you from seeing what is really there.  All 
you really need to feed an inverted L is a choke made from six to eight turn 
coil of coax at the feed point of the antenna to keep the current off the 
outside of the shield.  Buy an ARRL Antenna Handbook and study it.  Don't try 
to do it all before you build your first antenna as it will take too long, but 
it is chock full of
 good information that you can spend a lifetime absorbing.  Just read about 
your first antenna, build it, and make it work.  You can use a tree if you have 
a tall one or the pole, but the tree will be easier and much less expensive so 
start with the tree of you can.  Fifty feet is tall enough to give you good 
results on 160 and better results on the other bands.  I will stay with my 
recommendation to forget the external tuner and stay with the K3  tuner.
 
Willis 'Cookie' Cooke 
K5EWJ  Trustee N5BPS, USS Cavalla, USS Stewart



 From: Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com
To: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net Elecraft@mailman.qth.net 
Sent: Saturday, December 21, 2013 12:06 AM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners
 

Thanks for all the input!

Sorry, I misspoke about grounding - yes, I know that it's not really ground, 
but a grid against which the signal is balanced. It's very promising to hear 
that the K3's internal tuner will work, as it's less money and one less thing 
to deal with. Haven't decided where the antenna will go, but it'll probably be 
20-30 feet from the K3, using RG-8U. Also haven't decided whether to string up 
wire off a tree, or build a flag pole, stringing the horizontal wire off the 
top. Going that route would allow around a 50-ft vertical section without being 
too obvious.

FWIW, the name Mini Builder is getting auto-appended by Yahoo; I may change 
accounts to fix that. It comes from me having built several cars from scratch - 
you can waste hours at http://www.kimini.com/, and http://www.midlana.com/, but 
I know this isn't the place for that.



On Friday, December 20, 2013 9:29 PM, Fred Jensen k6...@foothill.net wrote:
  
On 12/20/2013 8:15 PM, Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
 1) A good ground is only important when the length is significantly
 less than 1/2 wavelength.  Otherwise the impedance at the feed point
 will be relatively high, meaning a ground is needed only to keep the
 rig from floating to a problematic RF potential as I explained in my
 first post.

Ron is correct, a half-wave is *nearly* insensitive to grounding [i.e. 
radial field].  However, strangely enough, feeding an EFHW, it really 
helps to have a radial hanging off the coax shield at the balun/xfmr at 
the antenna ... about 6in [15cm] long on 20m.  Learned this from EZNEC 
and verified it in the real universe.

 2) You want adequate distance between you and the radiator to comply
 with the FCC RF exposure guidelines. You need spacing at the higher
 frequencies. There are a variety of guidelines for that, but I always
 use 2 meters at 30 MHz. It's less on the lower frequency bands.

Sadly, RF exposure may be the least of your worries if you're close to 
the antenna.  I have a 3 pipe that runs vertically from a 1 ft sq 
utility box in the wall, opens under the desk and in the wall outside in 
the carport, weather head on the top.  It carries all my coax up and to 
the messenger to the tower.  I decided to mount a GAP Titan vertical on 
the pipe just below the weatherhead.  The antenna works great ... as an 
antenna ... but it is 12ft over my head in the shack.

All seems well in the shack on 40 and 30m.  Alas, on 20 and above, at 
500W, everything electronic in the shack either forgets everything it 
ever knew, or goes totally berserk.  Still working on ferrite therapy.

Don't know about the exposure issue [math major, not biomed], but in the 
late 50's/early 60's [late teens/very early 20's] working at the TV 
station to support myself in college, I got $50 twice a year to climb 
the tower [~400ft] and replace the clearance lamps which was an FAA 
requirement.  Station had the gear, they had it inspected twice a year 
by the mfr, they sent me to climbing school at PGE [power company], I 
climbed inside the tower on a ladder, and had a fall arrester on the 
steel cable down the center.  A work-out to the top, but I was really 
young and it wasn't exactly the most dangerous thing I'd ever do.

I climbed in the middle

Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-21 Thread Jim Brown

On 12/21/2013 6:56 AM, WILLIS COOKE wrote:

Kurt, 20 to 30 feet of RG-213 will give you an acceptable loss even on 6 meters 
and almost none on the lower bands.  I have over 200 feet of RG-213 feeding my 
SteppIR and it works pretty well on 6 meters.  I feed my L with about 125 feet 
of RG-8X and it works very well on 160 and 80.


Right -- IF the SWR at the antenna is not too high, and if the feedline 
is not too long. Every edition of the ARRL Handbook since at least the 
50s has a graph of the increased loss due to mismatch. It's in the 
chapter on Transmission Lines.



  Study the difference between a balun and an unun.  You feed a balanced 
antenna with a balun (balanced antenna to unbalanced coax feed) and an 
unbalanced antenna with an unun or unbalanced to unbalanced.  Neither is a 
magic device and both are just transformers.


WRONG!  Which is why I so strongly object to the word balun, which is 
used to describe at least a half dozen very different electrical 
components.  Yes, there are some transformers, mostly autotransformers, 
that are called baluns. But the most commonly used things that are 
called baluns are really common mode chokes. The function of a common 
mode choke is to BLOCK common mode current on the cable.



  Vendors enclose them in PVC to keep you from seeing what is really there.  
All you really need to feed an inverted L is a choke made from six to eight 
turn coil of coax at the feed point of the antenna to keep the current off the 
outside of the shield.


A coil of coax is a VERY misguided attempt at a common mode choke, 
because it is an inductor, and in the common mode circuit, a feedline 
shorter than a quarter wave is capacitive, so the inductor can resonate 
with the capacitance of the line and cause common mode current to 
increase!  In other words, there are many practical situations in which 
a coil of coax does not work at all, and makes things worse.


To make an effective common mode choke (often called a current balun 
to disguise how it works), we need a choke that is predominantly 
RESISTIVE at the frequency(ies) of interest. We achieve that by winding 
turns on a ferrite material that is very lossy at the frequency(ies) 
where we want the choke to be effective. A Fair-Rite #31 core is 
effective from VHF down to 160M and  the AM broadcast band; #43 material 
is effective from about 4 MHz up to VHF.  Study http://k9yc.com/RFI-Ham.pdf



  I will stay with my recommendation to forget the external tuner and stay with 
the K3  tuner.


Agreed -- IF it's big coax, not too long, and the mismatch between the 
antenna and the feedline is 10:1 or better.


73, Jim K9YC
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-21 Thread Vic Rosenthal K2VCO

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[Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Mini Builder
Background:
I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my
license at age 12, then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going
through my dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which brought
back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
 
Now:
I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things
changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before
that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure
that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna
tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80
watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3
output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
 
If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys
using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a built-in 
tuner, but I
don’t think it can work with an
inverted-L.
 
Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.

(I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. Follow-ons 
will be shorter :)
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread w...@i29.net
Hi Mini Builder Kurt

I run a K3 at 100 watts to a H-Gain Hy-Tower with a MFJ-927 tuner at the base. 
It is specified to match from 6 to 1600 ohms and handle 200 watts SSB and CW. 
It gets the 12 volts feed on the same coax as the RF signal. I have had my 
MFJ-927 for several years and in North Dakota it has had to work from 35 
degrees below zero to 110 degrees above with no problem.

I know you will get many more recommendations so I won't feel bad whatever you 
decide. Good luck and welcome back to ham radio.

73

Ken W0CZ
w...@i29.net

Sent from my iPad

 On Dec 20, 2013, at 8:44 PM, Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
 Background:
 I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my
 license at age 12, then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going
 through my dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which 
 brought
 back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
  
 Now:
 I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
 yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things
 changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before
 that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure
 that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna
 tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
 is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80
 watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3
 output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
  
 If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys
 using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a 
 built-in tuner, but I
 don’t think it can work with an
 inverted-L.
  
 Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.
 
 (I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. 
 Follow-ons will be shorter :)
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Ron D'Eau Claire
Welcome back to a great hobby Kurt!!

I have an inverted L because my shack is at one extreme end of the best space 
to run a wire on my property. 

My L goes straight up 40 feet and horizontally just a tad over 60 feet for a 
bit above 100 feet overall. 

MATCHING TO THE ANTENNA

The K3's ATU and the KAT500 both load it fine. To keep me away from the hot 
antenna, I use the KAT500 on a shelf above the operating desk. 

The trick to making it work is two-fold: 

1) Use the best ground that you can if you work 160 with it (on 80 through 10 
it's fine with a minimal ground, but something is good to keep the rig from 
floating high with RF voltage that can cause problems with the rig's circuits 
and which will cause your SWR to jump around when you touch the rig). A couple 
of wires on the ground, a connection to a metal water pipe, etc., are probably 
fine.

2) Be willing to tinker with the length a bit, if needed, so the tuner can find 
a match on all bands. The most difficult band is where the wire is near 1/2 
wavelength long (80 meters for me). That's where the impedance is highest. Once 
you have it working on the band closest to where  the antenna is 1/2 wavelength 
long, it should do fine on all of the others. When the wire is longer than 1/2 
wavelength, the impedance it presents is never as extreme. 

The challenge with any tuner is to never present an impedance that produces 
voltages in the tuner that exceed its ratings. 

POWER RATING

The SG230 is an excellent remote tuner. The critical rating is the peak which 
is 200 watts. The 80 watts continuous presumes that you put a brick on your key 
and leave it transmitting. We don't do that in normal CW operation. The SG230 
will handle well over 100 watts in normal CW mode. Now, if you get into 
operating full-carrier A.M., you might want to limit your output power to 100 
watts if you tend to be very long-winded, Hi! 

73 Ron AC7AC



-Original Message-
From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net 
[mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Mini Builder
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 6:45 PM
To: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

Background:
I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my license at age 12, then life 
moved on and my license expired. Recently, going through my dad’s stuff after 
he passed away, I found his license, which brought back many fond memories, so 
I decided to get back into it.
 
Now:
I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things 
changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before 
that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure that 
I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna tuner at 
its base. One promising remote tuner is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80 
watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3 output? 
(assuming worst-case key down 100%).
 
If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys using with 
inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a built-in tuner, but 
I don’t think it can work with an inverted-L.
 
Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.

(I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. Follow-ons 
will be shorter :) 
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Ariel Jacala
Hello Mini Builder

Welcome back.  The K3 internal tuner is the best choice.  I have used tuners of 
every stripe and Elecraft internal tuners have a very wide tuning range and 
will match everything that my other tuners won't.  Why do you need a remote 
tuner?  If you only have one antenna - you need a multiband antenna that is a 
wire.  An inverted L will need a lot of radials to be efficient and is good for 
the low bands.   Various wire antennas which do not need radials will do you 
better for 40-10m.  A K3 tuner will tune an inverted L provided you cut it 
right.  It will also tune wires of every stripe.

Ariel NY4G

Sent from my iPad

 On Dec 20, 2013, at 9:44 PM, Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
 Background:
 I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my
 license at age 12, then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going
 through my dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which 
 brought
 back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
  
 Now:
 I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
 yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things
 changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before
 that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure
 that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna
 tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
 is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80
 watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3
 output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
  
 If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys
 using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a 
 built-in tuner, but I
 don’t think it can work with an
 inverted-L.
  
 Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.
 
 (I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. 
 Follow-ons will be shorter :)
 __
 Elecraft mailing list
 Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
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 Post: mailto:Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Mini Builder
Thanks, guys.
 
My reasoning for thinking that I need a remote tuner is that
1. It’s recommended in about every reference I've seen, and B. What’s the
alternative? I assume it means going straight to coax (probably through a
balun) at the feed point, and putting up with whatever mismatch there is,
correct? Anyone know how much of a mismatch the K3 can handle? I know it's 
around 10:1 SWR, but what about impedance?

Yes, I know about the importance of a good ground on an inverted-L, that's 
definitely on the list.



On Friday, December 20, 2013 7:06 PM, Ariel Jacala n...@hotmail.com wrote:
  
Hello Mini Builder

Welcome back.  The K3 internal tuner is the best choice.  I have used tuners of 
every stripe and Elecraft internal tuners have a very wide tuning range and 
will match everything that my other tuners won't.  Why do you need a remote 
tuner?  If you only have one antenna - you need a multiband antenna that is a 
wire.  An inverted L will need a lot of radials to be efficient and is good for 
the low bands.   Various wire antennas which do not need radials will do you 
better for 40-10m.  A K3 tuner will tune an inverted L provided you cut it 
right.  It will also tune wires of every stripe.

Ariel NY4G

Sent from my iPad


 On Dec 20, 2013, at 9:44 PM, Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
 Background:
 I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my
 license at age 12, then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going
 through my dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which 
 brought
 back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
  
 Now:
 I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
 yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things
 changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before
 that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure
 that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna
 tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
 is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80
 watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3
 output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
  
 If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys
 using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a 
 built-in tuner, but I
 don’t think it can work with an
 inverted-L.
  
 Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.
 
 (I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. 
 Follow-ons will be shorter :)
 __
 Elecraft mailing list
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread WILLIS COOKE
Kurt, I have a K3 with tuner and amp.  I have a 65 foot tower with a 3 element 
SteppIR antenna.  Before Hurricane Ike I installed an inverted L with a 
homemade 80 meter trap.  The tower supports the trap and the 80 meter portion 
runs from a ground stake with 5 50 foot long radials.  Ike broke all the 
elements off my beam and while I had the beam down for repair I used the 
inverted L on all bands, 160 through 6 with a RG8X feed about 125 feet long and 
the internal tuner on the K3.  I have also used the K3 with internal tuner to 
tune a 106 foot long wire on a submarine on all bands.  I recommend you buy the 
K3 with the amp and tuner and skip the remote tuner.  Remember, the vertical 
part of the inverted L does nearly all the work and the horizontal part 
contributes very little, so make the vertical part of the wire as long as you 
can.  With 50 or 60 foot vertical it will be a good dx antenna.
 
Willis 'Cookie' Cooke 
K5EWJ  Trustee N5BPS, USS Cavalla, USS Stewart



 From: Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com
To: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net Elecraft@mailman.qth.net 
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 8:44 PM
Subject: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners
 

Background:
I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my
license at age 12, then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going
through my dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which brought
back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
 
Now:
I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things
changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before
that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure
that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna
tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80
watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3
output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
 
If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys
using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a built-in 
tuner, but I
don’t think it can work with an
inverted-L.
 
Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.

(I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. Follow-ons 
will be shorter :)
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Jim Brown

On 12/20/2013 7:22 PM, Mini Builder wrote:

My reasoning for thinking that I need a remote tuner is that
1. It’s recommended in about every reference I've seen, and B.


That's probably because the writers aren't good engineers. See below.


What’s the
alternative?


Coax to a turner in the shack. Depending on the type of coax, the length 
of the coax and the degree of mismatch, loss in the coax may be a lot 
less than you think. If you're going to put the tuner in the shack, 
spend the money for bigger coax -- a good RG8 or RG213 designed for 
transmitting that has a robust copper braid shield.




I assume it means going straight to coax (probably through a
balun)


Not a balun, a common mode choke.  See http://k9yc.com\RFI-Ham.pdf


at the feed point, and putting up with whatever mismatch there is,
correct? Anyone know how much of a mismatch the K3 can handle? I know it's 
around 10:1 SWR, but what about impedance?

Yes, I know about the importance of a good ground on an inverted-L,


Ground is the wrong word, and the wrong concept. What is needed is a 
good radial field, or, second best, a good counterpoise. Indeed, a 
connection to the earth degrades antenna performance!


See the piece on my website about getting on 160M from a small lot. It's 
mostly about antennas, and the radial/counterpoise concept is thoroughly 
discussed.  http://k9yc.com\publish.htm  Obviously, divide the lengths 
by 2 for 80M, by 4 for 40M, and so on. While you're on that website, 
take a look at the Power Point about If I Could Mount My HF Vertical on 
My Roof, Should I? And the remote tuner or tuner in the shack? is 
addressed in the Power Point about the 43 Ft vertical.


Welcome back to the hobby!  Antennas are one of the most fun parts for 
me. (Contesting is first.)


73, Jim K9YC


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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Gary Smith
Kurt,

I have 5 separate wire antennas: a 160M Inv-L, a 80M inv-L, a 40M 
vert, a 30M vert  a 20M vert. I've got 45 or so long radials 
attached to a radial plate. An Ameritron RCS-8V Remote Coax Switch 
allows me to select which of the 5 antennas to use. I have no 
external tuner to the K3. I use those antennas for these bands. I do 
have an internal tuner in the K3 to make its circuitry happy  not 
fold back power.

16o Inv-L = 160M, 15M, 12M, 10M +6M
80 Inv-L = 80M, 17M + 12M
40M vert = 40M + 15M
30M vert = 30M
20M vert = 20M

SWR readings via a LP-100A Watt Meter
160M = 1.19 SWR
80M = 1.70 
40M = 1.48
30M = 2.05
20M = 1.79
17M = 1.29 (80M inv-L)
15M = 2.39 (160M inv-L) + 1.12 (40M Vert)
12M = 2.38 (160M inv-L) + 1.69 (80M Inv-L)
10M = 1.91 (160M Inv-L)
6M = 1.45 (160M Inv-L)

I have no problem loading my tube amp into this system and on 15M  
12M I listen on each of the two antenna options for the loudest 
signal that I want to work  use that antenna. Though I do get 6M, 
there's enough coax loss that I don't bother doing much on 6M other 
than give out points for those in 6M contests that can hear me. 
Pretty much though if I can hear it I can work it (unless it's a 
pileup on a new DXpedition, then I have to wait till those with nice 
beams start to taper off) Hihi.

I would like 1.1 across the bands but I don't know that it will make 
any difference on either end. YMMV

Just another option
73,

Gary
KA1J


snip
 I´ve decided to get a
 K3, but before
 that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I´m
 pretty sure
 that I´m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote
 antenna
 tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
 is the SG-230, but it can only handle 80
 watts continuous. My question: In CW mode, how much power does
 the K3
 output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
  
 If the answer is 100W, what remote tuner are you guys
 using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have
 a built-in tuner, but I
 don´t think it can work with an
 inverted-L.
  
 Kurt - currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.



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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread WILLIS COOKE
Kurt, I have yet to find any reasonable antenna that my K3 tuner will not match 
except extremely short.  There are no absolutes in antennas.  The remote 
antenna matching device will be a little more efficient and will depend on what 
kind of coax you use and how long the coax.  Bear in mind that a lot of people 
use QRP which is more loss than a horrendous swr on 100 feet of small coax.  
From what you are telling us, you will be much better off with the built in 
tuner.  The K3 will put out at least 100 watts on all bands through 6 meters.   


 
Willis 'Cookie' Cooke 
K5EWJ  Trustee N5BPS, USS Cavalla, USS Stewart



 From: Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com
To: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net Elecraft@mailman.qth.net 
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners
 

Thanks, guys.
 
My reasoning for thinking that I need a remote tuner is that
1. It’s recommended in about every reference I've seen, and B. What’s the
alternative? I assume it means going straight to coax (probably through a
balun) at the feed point, and putting up with whatever mismatch there is,
correct? Anyone know how much of a mismatch the K3 can handle? I know it's 
around 10:1 SWR, but what about impedance?

Yes, I know about the importance of a good ground on an inverted-L, that's 
definitely on the list.



On Friday, December 20, 2013 7:06 PM, Ariel Jacala n...@hotmail.com wrote:
  
Hello Mini Builder

Welcome back.  The K3 internal tuner is the best choice.  I have used tuners of 
every stripe and Elecraft internal tuners have a very wide tuning range and 
will match everything that my other tuners won't.  Why do you need a remote 
tuner?  If you only have one antenna - you need a multiband antenna that is a 
wire.  An inverted L will need a lot of radials to be efficient and is good for 
the low bands.   Various wire antennas which do not need radials will do you 
better for 40-10m.  A K3 tuner will tune an inverted L provided you cut it 
right.  It will also tune wires of every stripe.

Ariel NY4G

Sent from my iPad


 On Dec 20, 2013, at 9:44 PM, Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
 Background:
 I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my
 license at age 12, then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going
 through my dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which 
 brought
 back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
  
 Now:
 I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
 yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have things
 changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a K3, but before
 that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 100W. I’m pretty sure
 that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which requires a remote antenna
 tuner at its base. One promising remote tuner
 is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80
 watts continuous.” My question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3
 output? (assuming worst-case key down 100%).
  
 If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys
 using with inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a 
 built-in tuner, but I
 don’t think it can work with an
 inverted-L.
  
 Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.
 
 (I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. 
 Follow-ons will be shorter :)
 __
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Ron D'Eau Claire
1) A good ground is only important when the length is significantly less than 
1/2 wavelength.  Otherwise the impedance at the feed point will be relatively 
high, meaning a ground is needed only to keep the rig from floating to a 
problematic RF potential as I explained in my first post. 

2) You want adequate distance between you and the radiator to comply with the 
FCC RF exposure guidelines. You need spacing at the higher frequencies. There 
are a variety of guidelines for that, but I always use 2 meters at 30 MHz. It's 
less on the lower frequency bands. 

73 Ron AC7AC

-Original Message-
From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net 
[mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Mini Builder
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 7:22 PM
To: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

Thanks, guys.
 
My reasoning for thinking that I need a remote tuner is that 1. It’s 
recommended in about every reference I've seen, and B. What’s the alternative? 
I assume it means going straight to coax (probably through a
balun) at the feed point, and putting up with whatever mismatch there is, 
correct? Anyone know how much of a mismatch the K3 can handle? I know it's 
around 10:1 SWR, but what about impedance?

Yes, I know about the importance of a good ground on an inverted-L, that's 
definitely on the list.



On Friday, December 20, 2013 7:06 PM, Ariel Jacala n...@hotmail.com wrote:
  
Hello Mini Builder

Welcome back.  The K3 internal tuner is the best choice.  I have used tuners of 
every stripe and Elecraft internal tuners have a very wide tuning range and 
will match everything that my other tuners won't.  Why do you need a remote 
tuner?  If you only have one antenna - you need a multiband antenna that is a 
wire.  An inverted L will need a lot of radials to be efficient and is good for 
the low bands.   Various wire antennas which do not need radials will do you 
better for 40-10m.  A K3 tuner will tune an inverted L provided you cut it 
right.  It will also tune wires of every stripe.

Ariel NY4G

Sent from my iPad


 On Dec 20, 2013, at 9:44 PM, Mini Builder kiminicoop...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
 Background:
 I got into ham radio back in the 1970s, getting my license at age 12, 
 then life moved on and my license expired. Recently, going through my 
 dad’s stuff after he passed away, I found his license, which brought 
 back many fond memories, so I decided to get back into it.
  
 Now:
 I just passed the Technician and General test (no call sign
 yet) and have been looking at the state of the art - HOLY SMOKES have 
 things changed! Anyhow, after a lot of research, I’ve decided to get a 
 K3, but before that, I need an antenna. The K3 (with amp) outputs 
 100W. I’m pretty sure that I’m going with an inverted-L antenna, which 
 requires a remote antenna tuner at its base. One promising remote 
 tuner is the SG-230, but it can only handle “80 watts continuous.” My 
 question: In CW mode, how much power does the K3 output? (assuming 
 worst-case key down 100%).
  
 If the answer is “100W”, what remote tuner are you guys using with 
 inverted-Lsand your K3s? Yes, I know that the K3 can have a built-in 
 tuner, but I don’t think it can work with an inverted-L.
  
 Kurt – currently call-sign-less, but who was once WB6DSW.
 
 (I understand about keeping posts short, but this is my intro post. 
 Follow-ons will be shorter :) 
 __
 Elecraft mailing list
 Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
 Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
 Post: mailto:Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 
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 email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Fred Jensen

On 12/20/2013 8:15 PM, Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:

1) A good ground is only important when the length is significantly
less than 1/2 wavelength.  Otherwise the impedance at the feed point
will be relatively high, meaning a ground is needed only to keep the
rig from floating to a problematic RF potential as I explained in my
first post.


Ron is correct, a half-wave is *nearly* insensitive to grounding [i.e. 
radial field].  However, strangely enough, feeding an EFHW, it really 
helps to have a radial hanging off the coax shield at the balun/xfmr at 
the antenna ... about 6in [15cm] long on 20m.  Learned this from EZNEC 
and verified it in the real universe.


2) You want adequate distance between you and the radiator to comply
with the FCC RF exposure guidelines. You need spacing at the higher
frequencies. There are a variety of guidelines for that, but I always
use 2 meters at 30 MHz. It's less on the lower frequency bands.


Sadly, RF exposure may be the least of your worries if you're close to 
the antenna.  I have a 3 pipe that runs vertically from a 1 ft sq 
utility box in the wall, opens under the desk and in the wall outside in 
the carport, weather head on the top.  It carries all my coax up and to 
the messenger to the tower.  I decided to mount a GAP Titan vertical on 
the pipe just below the weatherhead.  The antenna works great ... as an 
antenna ... but it is 12ft over my head in the shack.


All seems well in the shack on 40 and 30m.  Alas, on 20 and above, at 
500W, everything electronic in the shack either forgets everything it 
ever knew, or goes totally berserk.  Still working on ferrite therapy.


Don't know about the exposure issue [math major, not biomed], but in the 
late 50's/early 60's [late teens/very early 20's] working at the TV 
station to support myself in college, I got $50 twice a year to climb 
the tower [~400ft] and replace the clearance lamps which was an FAA 
requirement.  Station had the gear, they had it inspected twice a year 
by the mfr, they sent me to climbing school at PGE [power company], I 
climbed inside the tower on a ladder, and had a fall arrester on the 
steel cable down the center.  A work-out to the top, but I was really 
young and it wasn't exactly the most dangerous thing I'd ever do.


I climbed in the middle of the day, TX was on a ridge just off the 
Pacific and the wind was constant and cold.  We were also on the air, 
10KW visual and 10KW aural, and at the top lamps, where the mast started 
up to the turnstile antenna, I would linger a little because I got warm 
for the trip down. :-)  OSHA today would have a major cow.  The station 
hired riggers to service the beacon on top, it had a automatic spare. 
$50 was a lot then, the first check fixed the brakes on my old truck, 
lack of which was probably far more dangerous than the tower. :-)


73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2014 Cal QSO Party 4-5 Oct 2014
- www.cqp.org


73 Ron AC7AC


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Re: [Elecraft] CW power output and remote tuners

2013-12-20 Thread Mini Builder
Thanks for all the input!

Sorry, I misspoke about grounding - yes, I know that it's not really ground, 
but a grid against which the signal is balanced. It's very promising to hear 
that the K3's internal tuner will work, as it's less money and one less thing 
to deal with. Haven't decided where the antenna will go, but it'll probably be 
20-30 feet from the K3, using RG-8U. Also haven't decided whether to string up 
wire off a tree, or build a flag pole, stringing the horizontal wire off the 
top. Going that route would allow around a 50-ft vertical section without being 
too obvious.

FWIW, the name Mini Builder is getting auto-appended by Yahoo; I may change 
accounts to fix that. It comes from me having built several cars from scratch - 
you can waste hours at http://www.kimini.com/, and http://www.midlana.com/, but 
I know this isn't the place for that.



On Friday, December 20, 2013 9:29 PM, Fred Jensen k6...@foothill.net wrote:
  
On 12/20/2013 8:15 PM, Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
 1) A good ground is only important when the length is significantly
 less than 1/2 wavelength.  Otherwise the impedance at the feed point
 will be relatively high, meaning a ground is needed only to keep the
 rig from floating to a problematic RF potential as I explained in my
 first post.

Ron is correct, a half-wave is *nearly* insensitive to grounding [i.e. 
radial field].  However, strangely enough, feeding an EFHW, it really 
helps to have a radial hanging off the coax shield at the balun/xfmr at 
the antenna ... about 6in [15cm] long on 20m.  Learned this from EZNEC 
and verified it in the real universe.

 2) You want adequate distance between you and the radiator to comply
 with the FCC RF exposure guidelines. You need spacing at the higher
 frequencies. There are a variety of guidelines for that, but I always
 use 2 meters at 30 MHz. It's less on the lower frequency bands.

Sadly, RF exposure may be the least of your worries if you're close to 
the antenna.  I have a 3 pipe that runs vertically from a 1 ft sq 
utility box in the wall, opens under the desk and in the wall outside in 
the carport, weather head on the top.  It carries all my coax up and to 
the messenger to the tower.  I decided to mount a GAP Titan vertical on 
the pipe just below the weatherhead.  The antenna works great ... as an 
antenna ... but it is 12ft over my head in the shack.

All seems well in the shack on 40 and 30m.  Alas, on 20 and above, at 
500W, everything electronic in the shack either forgets everything it 
ever knew, or goes totally berserk.  Still working on ferrite therapy.

Don't know about the exposure issue [math major, not biomed], but in the 
late 50's/early 60's [late teens/very early 20's] working at the TV 
station to support myself in college, I got $50 twice a year to climb 
the tower [~400ft] and replace the clearance lamps which was an FAA 
requirement.  Station had the gear, they had it inspected twice a year 
by the mfr, they sent me to climbing school at PGE [power company], I 
climbed inside the tower on a ladder, and had a fall arrester on the 
steel cable down the center.  A work-out to the top, but I was really 
young and it wasn't exactly the most dangerous thing I'd ever do.

I climbed in the middle of the day, TX was on a ridge just off the 
Pacific and the wind was constant and cold.  We were also on the air, 
10KW visual and 10KW aural, and at the top lamps, where the mast started 
up to the turnstile antenna, I would linger a little because I got warm 
for the trip down. :-)  OSHA today would have a major cow.  The station 
hired riggers to service the beacon on top, it had a automatic spare. 
$50 was a lot then, the first check fixed the brakes on my old truck, 
lack of which was probably far more dangerous than the tower. :-)

73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2014 Cal QSO Party 4-5 Oct 2014
- www.cqp.org


 73 Ron AC7AC

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