> I collapse it down to 33ft6in.
Why bother?
Insert an 8' piece of fiberglass tubing in the top ... now you have a
50' +/- support. Install two 8' pieces of PVC or fiberglass tubing in
a horizontal cross at 30 to 35'. On one, run your 80 meter wire - tie
it back to the tip of the antenna and
).
--
From: Ron D'Eau Claire r...@cobi.biz
Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2013 5:28 PM
To: 'Reflector Elecraft' elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 43 Ft Vertical and Elecraft Tuners
An interesting point I noticed modeling a 43 foot vertical was that, while
on 10 meters
Definitely a loaded question. No pun intended. I don't have any
experience with 43 ft verticals myself but have heard a lot about them
and have been thinking about building one. I too would like to learn more.
Matt Moller
KG6KSL
K3 #3496
On 9/2/2013 4:10 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
43 ft verticals
most people I have heard running a 23 or 32 ot 43 foot vertical all use
a 4:1 and a 1:1 inline...
I hvae also been reading articals where a 5.1 rf coil is used.
--
R.Neese
KB3VGW
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Home:
Dave WX7G wrote an article that may be of interest:
www.eham.net/articles/21272
I also have some info in the “Presentations” section of my website at
www.ad5x.com.
As Jim says, if you use good quality coax over reasonable distances (I use 1/2”
heliax over a 60-ft run), SWR-related losses are
On 09/03/2013 06:29 AM, Phil Debbie Salas wrote:
I also have some info in the “Presentations” section of my website at
www.ad5x.com.
Phil's The 43-Foot Vertical presentation is very well written and
contains a wealth of good information.
Phil references a 10 Ohm ground. Using the information
On 9/2/2013 11:18 PM, Matt Moller wrote:
I don't have any experience with 43 ft verticals myself but have heard
a lot about them and have been thinking about building one. I too
would like to learn more.
The reason for my post asking for experience with this antenna and the
Elecraft tuner is
Hi Jim,
I use exactly that here in Tampa. My antenna is a stealth 43' of green 18
gauge wire up a tree and 43' of the same horizontal hidden in the bushes. I
am in an apartment. The feed point is about 10' above ground. I feed it with
open wire line from a 4:1 balun on the back of my K3 with
Thanks Mike. Your observations about radiation angle and performance
are in good agreement with my modeling. Yes, the secret sauce is that 43
ft is 5/8 on 20M.
73, Jim K9YC
On 9/3/2013 11:17 AM, mikefur...@att.net wrote:
Hi Jim,
I use exactly that here in Tampa. My antenna is a stealth 43'
An interesting point I noticed modeling a 43 foot vertical was that, while
on 10 meters the main lobe is up around 50 degrees, the gain at low angles
is similar to a 1/4 wave ground plane antenna cut for 10 meters. That's
because the longer antenna has significant gain over a 1/4 wave antenna so
YES! You've hit the nail beautifully on the head, Ron. I just finished
preparing slides comparing a 43 ft ground-mounted vertical with a good
radial system on 20M, 15M, and 10M with a classic ground plane at 30 ft
and vertical dipole with a base at 30 ft for those bands.Looking at
performance
This has been an excellent discussion on the 43 foot vertical. I have one
installed in my back yard (DX Engineering). Very happy with it overall. It's
been an excellent performer on 20 meters, and good on other bands; I'm a casual
DX-er, but have worked 5 continents SSB with the 12 watt output
On 9/3/2013 5:23 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
The practical problem with sticking a ground plane on your roof is that
it needs at least two radials per band, but there are several multiband
antennas for those bands configured as vertical dipoles that work well
without radials. That's the basis of my
On 9/3/2013 7:30 PM, Fred Jensen wrote:
With the KPA500 at 500W, on 40m, I get a lot of RF from the GAP
screwing up things like the WinKey, the laptop, and various other
digital gadgets.
The first thing I would do is put a serious ferrite choke on the coax at
the antenna. If that doesn't
...@audiosystemsgroup.com
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2013 11:03 PM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 43 Ft Vertical and Elecraft Tuners
On 9/3/2013 7:30 PM, Fred Jensen wrote:
With the KPA500 at 500W, on 40m, I get a lot of RF from the GAP screwing
up things like the WinKey
to tangles.
73, Charlie k3ICH
- Original Message - From: Jim Brown
j...@audiosystemsgroup.com
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2013 11:03 PM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 43 Ft Vertical and Elecraft Tuners
On 9/3/2013 7:30 PM, Fred Jensen wrote:
With the KPA500 at 500W
I use paralleled dipoles here, and I have limited the number of bands on
a single feedline to 3 bands, so I have one for 20, 15, and 10 meters,
and another for 30, 17, and 12. The wires are spaced about 1 foot apart
with PVC spreaders.
Tuning them is a bit of a challenge, but if one tunes
On 9/3/2013 9:16 PM, Don Wilhelm wrote:
I use paralleled dipoles here, and I have limited the number of bands
on a single feedline to 3 bands, so I have one for 20, 15, and 10
meters, and another for 30, 17, and 12. The wires are spaced about 1
foot apart with PVC spreaders.
I like fan
Good question... I would like to know too.
A wise man once said nothing
On Sep 2, 2013, at 5:10 PM, Jim Brown j...@audiosystemsgroup.com wrote:
43 ft verticals have become a popular antenna, and while they have some
strong points, they present a very high SWR on most bands, so they
I know this isn't an answer to the basic premise of the raised question,
but let me throw this out.
1. 43 ft. verticals that are ground mounted require a large, good ground
system.
2. Depending on the band you are operating, the assumption of a high
VSWR is correct.
3. High VSWRs on coax are
One can feed the 43 foot vertical with ladder line, and do the tuning in
the shack (yes, you can feed a vertical with balanced line), but if
feeding with coax, the best place for the matching network is at the
base of the antenna. Coax is good for an swr of 2.0 or less (depending
on the
Hi Jim !!
I have a ZeroFive 40 meter monoband vertical with 60-12 ft radials on a
radial plate and use only the tuner on my K1. I can easily tune 40 , 20 and
15 but 30 I can get down to 1.6 to 1 (still acceptable) Feedline is RG-8X
that is 75 ft long. Used this setup in many DX contests with
George,
Let me suggest that move your tuner to the base of the vertical. It
shouldn't make a big difference in tuning, but will cut your losses due
to SWR, particularly on 15.
73,
Barry
K3NDM
On 9/2/2013 8:49 PM, gos...@twcny.rr.com wrote:
Hi Jim !!
I have a ZeroFive 40 meter monoband
.
73, Ron AC7AC
-Original Message-
From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net
[mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Barry LaZar
Sent: Monday, September 02, 2013 4:32 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 43 Ft Vertical and Elecraft Tuners
I know this isn't
-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Ron D'Eau Claire
Sent: Monday, September 02, 2013 7:04 PM
To: 'Barry LaZar'; elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 43 Ft Vertical and Elecraft Tuners
Barry, Number 1 is true if, and only if, the antenna is used below 14 MHz.
It's all a matter of feed
Don#x27;t worry about remoteing the tuner, but ditch the RG8X and use RG8 with
the least loss you can find.
George,W6GF
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Help:
The proof of this - you would never dream of putting up half of
a dipole. Hi Hi
Sure. It's called an End Fed Half Wave dipole. Oh, but to some, that's not an
antenna.
--
Mark, KJ7BS
Glendale, AZ
Editor, The SKCC Centurion
Elecraft K2 S/N 0539
Fists # 2972 CC 1806
SKCC # 2240 C56 T20
MQFD #
SteppIR.
Willis 'Cookie' Cooke
K5EWJ
From: Mark, KJ7BS kj...@cox.net
To: plama...@verizon.net plama...@verizon.net; David Little
a...@verizon.net; Elecraft Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Mon, June 7, 2010 1:27:36 PM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 43 ft Vertical
It is an antenna and a good one, but it is not half of a dipole, it is
a whole dipole. It does not matter where a dipole is fed, it is still
a half wave long.
73,
Rick Detinger K7MW
On Jun 7, 2010, at 11:27 AM, Mark, KJ7BS wrote:
The proof of this - you would never dream of putting up
On Mon, 07 Jun 2010 13:13:25 -0500, David Little a...@verizon.net
wrote:
The other half of this vertical antenna is the ground system. Without
that other half, you will be wasting your time and money on the first
half. The proof of this - you would never dream of putting up half of
a
On Mon, 7 Jun 2010 11:51:41 -0700, Rick Dettinger k7m...@gmail.com
wrote:
What you are describing is a half wave end fed wire which has the
other side of the circuit attached to ground.
For an antenna to be a dipole it must be two individual wires each fed
independently by a balanced or
Well if you double the frequency, then add a quarter wavelength of
ladder line, you have the original Zepp antenna, or the modern
equivalent, a J-pole.
73,
Don W3FPR
Mark, KJ7BS wrote:
The proof of this - you would never dream of putting up half of
a dipole. Hi Hi
It is an antenna and a good one, but it is not half of a dipole, it is
a whole dipole. It does not matter where a dipole is fed, it is still
a half wave long.
I beg to differ. A dipole is an antenna with two elements fed at the same
location. A half wave end fed is only one element that
I find this discussion pretty enlightening as I too plan to use my 50 ft.
fiberglass mast to support a vertical as well as my G5RV. (Well, not really
a G5RV as the ladder line will run all the way to the shack.)
Sadly, I feel the dreaded End of Thread message coming though. As always,
take care
I have a 43 ft vertical from Zero Five and I purchased the switching balun
from Phil after it was featured in QST. I switch back and forth from the
PRO67B at 72 ft and the vertical and am amazed how good the vertical works.
The ground is the key.
Phil
Philip LaMarche
LaMarche Enterprises,
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