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Re: Topband: ZS6BKW(G5RV) on 160m?

To: Mike Smith VE9AA <ve9aa@nbnet.nb.ca>, topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: ZS6BKW(G5RV) on 160m?
From: "Keith Jillings (G3OIT)" <g3oit.keith@jillings.org.uk>
Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2015 22:51:49 +0000
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
On 26/03/2015 21:12, Mike Smith VE9AA wrote:

This is great info.  Hey, thanks guys,.////As I read these comments, I am now wondering if there is a magic 
length of coax, that attaches to the 40’ of  450 ladder line that I could short right in/at the 
improvised vacation shack end, or just at the interface to the door/window/outside world, where I will be 
allowed to bring the coax in the (for lack of a better term), “cottage”….?

It’s a long story, but I am thinking I am going to be limited to one antenna, and 
there may not be any more than one coax, and no going in and out the building in the wee 
hours of the morning.  A restrictive scenario, but you’ll just have to trust me.

So, if I could have, let’s say…..10’ of coax in the “shack”, then let’s just say for example, 40’ feet of coax and then the 40’ of ladder 
line, could I short the coax 10’ from the rig in the shack (and even add a coil ?), then if I wanted to get back on the other bands, simply unshort the 10’ run and put everything as 
normal?  My goal would be to work some W1’s/W2’s/VE3’s and perhaps a G/EA, Carib? on 160m just for mults.  I’d rather not carry too much gear with me, so if I could get 
it in the ballpark and let the Icom’s internal tuner handle a small mismatch, I’d be OK with that.  I might even rethink the 2 gnd radials and tie into the cottage gnd, but whatever 
works.  I’m not clear yet what the trip hazard ratio will be where I am at.

Hi Mike,

I haven't quite got my head round what you're planning, but what I'm doing may give you some ideas...

A G5RV is a compromise antenna. It's based round a doublet fed with ladderline, and a coaxial feed that sort-of matches it. It works, sort-of.

I had one here. I wasn't impressed with the performance. I removed the coax, brought the ribbon feeder into the shack, and built a matching unit using a roller inductor, switched variable and fixed capacitors, and air-cored baluns. I tried a "broadband" ferrite balun, but it got very hot on some bands. The air ones don't even get warm.

Getting rid of the G5RV coax improved performance significantly - I can get an indicated 1:1 match on all the HF bands on the input to the matching unit. I don't know how well it's performing overall since I don't have the measuring equipment, but it does well in pileups and I seem to be able to work stuff. It takes a while to retune when I change band, but I'm not in a hurry. I have all the settings written down.

On 160, I strap the ribbon feeder and load the whole antenna as a "T", tuned against ground. I live in a house built around 1490 and there are all kinds of restrictions on what I'm allowed to do, but nobody knows about the radial field that runs round the garden, across the lawn, etc - about half an inch below the surface. The antenna runs between three trees, with a telescopic pole hidden in the middle one to get the feedpoint above the treetop. I need to do some more experimenting with it on 160. I can work all of Europe and into Africa and Asia, but I'm definitely in the "little pistol" category on top band. I don't think there's a better solution given the restrictions of the listed property.

Best of luck - hope maybe we will work on 160!

Best 73,

Keith  G3OIT

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