On 9/4/2011 8:06 PM, Michael G. Carper wrote: > My goal is simple - make DXCC on 160m within the next 2 years.
That's a very ambitious objective. It took me three seasons to do it when I moved from Chicago to CA, and two more years to get the confirmations. It's much easier from W9 than from W6, but it's still very ambitious. I'm using an 86 ft Tee vertical (see below) with 70+ radials, Beverages for four directions, and 1.5kW. > > > > So I'm looking for some advice about the antenna. > > > > I'm very tempted to buy a B&W folded dipole and call it done. LOUSY choice. For one thing, that resistor burns half the transmitter power. For another, 70 ft is very low for a horizontal 160M antenna. > but I'm > curious about what others are doing. I've got an amplifier, but no > high-power tuner. So I want to avoid a tuner - the folded dipole seems to > get me there and I can put it up at 70' or so in the elm trees. > > For 160M you want a good vertical with a LOT of radials. If you can get horizontal wires up 70 ft, use those rigging points to rig a top-loaded Tee vertical. Make the vertical part as tall as possible, add horizontal wires to bring the antenna to resonance. Why are you trying to avoid a tuner? Is it cost? You're going to need to spend some money on an antenna system that will work. A tuner is part of that cost. Find a used Ten Tec 229B or 238, which are excellent tuners (manual) that go for $275-$325. There is great advice in the ARRL Handbook about radials, and how to get the most bang for your buck with a given length of wire. A good starting point is 30 radials, 70 ft long. #18 copper is about the smallest wire that won't break. You can buy #14 THHN (house wire) for about $35/500 ft at Lowe's and Home Depot, and there's a 10% discount for buying five or six spools. You are also going to need Beverage antennas to HEAR the DX. It sounds like you have the space for that. They can be cheap to build if you wind your own transformers, and you can feed them with virtually any coax (like TV coax, or old RG58/59 that you have in your junk box). You can let brush hold the wire above ground, and you can make supports by cutting 1/2-in PVC conduit into 5 ft lengths, cutting small gauge rebar into 3 ft lengths, sticking the rebar halfway in the ground, and sliding the PVC over them. Drill a 1/4-in hole in the top of the PVC and use a tie-wrap to secure the Beverage wire to the support. At your QTH, you'll want at least four -- one pointed to EU that also gets you AF, one to VK/ZL that also gets you Oceania, and another to JA and Asiatic Russia. > Thoughts? Buy a copy of the ON4UN book and study it carefully. 160M is a fun band, but it is not a CHEAP band if you want to work a lot of DX. No, you don't need to spend money on Aluminum, but you will need to spend some bucks on these simple wire antennas. To get those wires high in the trees, look at the Big Shot, a super slingshot sold by Sherrill Tree Service in NC. About $100, and a lot cheaper than paying folks to climb those trees and install pulleys. You'll also need some good sun-proof rope to hold those wires up. For more detailed advice on building and rigging wire antennas in tall trees, see my website. I've got a half dozen wires up 100-120 ft in tall redwoods, and in the process, learned a lot about what keeps them up through heavy storms. One of them is a 160M dipole. My 86ft Tee vertical with 70+ radials consistently beats it, often by a lot. http://audiosystemsgroup.com/publish.htm 73, Jim K9YC _______________________________________________ UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK
