On the VHF Contesting Reflector, James Duffey, KK6MC posted some interesting
suggestions for an amateur who wanted to try VHF DXing, but was going to be
limited to indoor antennas. As you all know, this subject is near and dear to
my heart. (ha, ha)
One suggestion James made was adding fixed long boom Yagi's pointed towards
major population centers to supplement shorter antennas that would be mounted
on rotors. This fits my own situation to a tee. While I've nearly maxed out the
length of antennas that can fit on my rotor stack in the largest void, I have
several other pockets in the attic that could support higher gain antennas in
fixed directions.
For this to work, I'd need to work out some sort of switching arrangement,
which introduces loss on all the antennas connected...so have to think about
that a bit.
The real issue for me would be deciding where to point the antennas. Contest
scores are not my main goal, working new grids especially on 2 Meters and 432
would be. My first thought would be generally Northeast and Southeast, since
there are quite a few guys active in North Carolina, and also in Florida. To
the west doesn't help me much unless an opening gets into Texas...East should
be good with Atlanta in the beamwidth, but there just doesn't seem to be a lot
of activity in that direction.
Any suggestions on how to make this choice?
73,
Les Rayburn, N1LF
EM63nf
Les Rayburn, director
High Noon Film
100 Centerview Drive Suite 111
Birmingham, AL 35216-3748
205.824.8930
205.824.8960 fax
205.253.4867 cell
_______________________________________________
VHFcontesting mailing list
VHFcontesting@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/vhfcontesting
|