| Thanks Tom for the explanation. As always, this is a learning Reflector. Part 
of my location involves potential BCB, power line, adjacent home electronics, 
and of course the legal limit transmissions close to the loop/feed/rotator 
controller. Common mode supression is an absolute requirement on all lines. 
As to it's +- effect on the loop, well, as I mentioned, it was a shotgun 
process during the installation. Without common mode filtering on all cabling I 
couldn't operate. Such is the dilemma of the city dweller who has an S4-7 noise 
floor depending upon season. It's substantially worse in winter as explained 
below.
I'm told that the effective RF ground in these parts of Alaska is 15+ meters 
down, and it'll find a way into the shack unless crowbarred at the door. Ground 
rods surrounded by 4-5' of winter frost and non-conductive soils are useless. 
73, Gary NL7Y
> This doesn't mean loops will never work, or loops with poor feed systems will 
> never make people happy. It just means it is almost impossible to correct a 
> bad feed design by stringing beads or winding conventional chokes, even if 
> you get up to 5,000 ohms. It is always far better to make the antenna with a 
> correct feed system, because a proper feed has far less common mode response 
> without any common mode foolery.
> 
> 73 Tom 
All good topband ops know how to put up a beverage at night.
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Topband Reflector
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