Your rant made me think about a real world possibility here in Florida.
If I could get 20' ground rods down to the water level at four corners,
then tie them together with copper strip or 2/0 in an X shape and then
attached that to the base of a vertical would I not have a "groundscreen
extraordinaire"? Or would I need to duplicate the water at grade level
and use chicken wire to cover the entire area between the four water-table
grounded rods? (The four 20" rods and the X connection sure would be
less hassle to work around than the chicken wire!)
The intitial thought is to use this with my Butternut HF6V, a second thought
is to create something vertical and dedicated to 80m.
Got the creative juices flowing now! 73, DavidC K1YP
*****************************************************************
> IT AIN'T TUNED for a GREAT groundscreen like a tin roof! If it was, it
would
> look terrible on the SWR meter at Joe Averageham's place
>
> 3) The reason why a lot of shortened antennas look broad is because SOD
LOSSES
> AREN'T FREQUENCY SENSITIVE. If half your power is lost in the sod (and the
> factory boys have tuned it for the normal nasty ground losses), it will
cut down
> your swr hugely at the edges of the range, giving the appearance of a
broader
> antenna.
>
> Put it back over the tin roof and SWR goes up and bandwidth narrows (but
it
> plays better because no near field ground losses).
>
> 73, Guy k2av@contesting.com
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