So I am trying to get set up better on 160 meters. I now have two antennas up
(pretty well separated). One is an Alpha Delta DX A sloper hung in a tree with
a grounding wire led to a ground rod and small radial field. The other is an
inverted L on a good radial system of about 2000 feet in various lengths of
about 50 feet each as fit the yard. Both are resonant at about 1.830 .
The sloper loads fine all the way up to 1500 watts. The inverted L loads just
fine to about 700 watts and then causes the Alpha amp to fault out. I think I
am getting a sudden change in antenna impedance. The antenna is fed through a 5
KW rated choke balun. The feed line exits the base between radials. I've tried
various feed line lengths, I've replaced every component in the system except
for the antenna wire. The antenna does climb along the branches of a tall pine
before L-ing outward at about 55 feet. I think the problem is worse at night
time when things are cold (and perhaps more humid).
What I see on the amp is output power suddenly seem to surge to 2500 watts, and
reflected power jump from a few watts to over what the amp can read… then in a
flash the amp faults out. This all happens with only about 20 watts of drive,
so the amp can't actually be putting out 2500 watts unless something very
strange has happened. As I noted, using the other antenna all is good.
I need to get the inverted L working since it seems to have substantial receive
gain vs the sloper, so I assume it will be equally better on transmit.
All advice is welcome. Am I likely to be "arc-ing" to the tree branches? Could
the wire be the problem? Do inverted L's have trouble with full power? The same
wire worked fine for the last few years, but fed against a much lesser radial
field and run through a less dense, lower tree.
I'll be trying everything I can think of tomorrow afternoon, starting by trying
to minimize contact with the tree branches. All suggestions welcome.
73
KQ0C
Ash
_______________________________________________
Topband reflector - topband@contesting.com
|