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Re: [TowerTalk] looking for a source for open wire line spreaders

To: "larryj@teleport.com" <larryj@teleport.com>, towertalk reflector <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] looking for a source for open wire line spreaders
From: Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Reply-to: jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
Date: Sun, 7 Apr 2019 12:49:22 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 4/5/2019 4:16 PM, larryj@teleport.com wrote:
Jim, is this a fan dipole that's fed with open-wire feeders?

No, my fan dipoles are all fed with coax.  My primary 80/40 antenna for JA and SA is a fan fed with RG11 (because it's up 120 ft, the feedpoint Z is around 88 ohms). I had another one broadside to EU/VK until I rigged a second dipole as a reflector, and made both of them 80 M dipoles, making the directivity reversible.  To make the reflector work, I have to switch in a stub in the shack that shorts the feedpoint.

Before I found a clearing in my dense redwood forest large enough to turn a 3-el SteppIR, I had two  3-wire fans cut for 20, 15, and 10M at right angles to each other, also up around 100 ft. They were a better match to 50 ohm coax, so that's what I used.


I've used my 80-Meter inverted-vee fed with ladder line (lazy man's open wire) 
on all bands with a tuner (Johnson KW Matchbox, Dentron MT-3000A, etc.) for 
many years (seems to get through just about every pileup, every band.)


One of the advantages of resonant dipoles is their predictable pattern, with a single pair of broadside lobes and nulls off the ends.

Would I gain anything by actually having several "near resonant" lengths in a 
multi-band fan-dipole fed by open wire, as compared to just using the 80-Meter antenna 
through the tuner?

No, because resonant dipoles are a mismatch to the high Z of the open wire or ladder line, so you still need something in the shack to match the line to the transmitter.  By the time you've done that, total loss in  the system is likely to be about the same as in good quality coax on the bands where the antenna is resonant.

Also, as N6BT has famously said and demonstrated, "everything works," it's just a question of how well. His demonstration was to work all continents with a light bulb.  I have 170 countries worked with 5W in about five years, including many DXpeditions. Many years ago, when I lived in Chicago, I worked a guy on Long Island on 6M whose antenna was in his basement.  I think we'd all agree that we can do more more power and better, higher antennas.

Another factor is location. If your measure is DX, defined as another country, the midwest and east coast are a LOT closer to a lot more countries (EU, AF, Caribbean) than the west coast, where I now live. To work EU below 20M, I need every dB I can get, just as midwest and east coast station do to work JA.

I know about having coax-fed (with chokes) fan dipoles, which I've used years 
ago and also had good luck with those.

Another major advantage of resonant antennas fed with coax is that you can choke them to reduce RX noise. i don't know of a practical way to choke non-resonant antennas, or antennas fed with open wire or window line.

73, Jim K9YC


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