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Re: Topband: Inverted L improvement question

To: Jeff Woods <jmwooods@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Topband: Inverted L improvement question
From: Wes Stewart <wes_n7ws@triconet.org>
Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2018 09:34:22 -0700
List-post: <mailto:topband@contesting.com>
Jeff, et.al.

1)  Yes, I am on 1.7 acres (2 AC - easements).  Some guys would love this much land, to farmers it's just enough room for the barn.  Regardless, considering I also have a house, a tower and a vertical antenna to share it with, I don't have room for Beverages, at least not an effective ones that point in desired directions. The latter can be akin to those guys who say, a 3/2 wavelength dipole has gain over a dipole, but never consider whether that gain is in a useful direction.

2)  Adding to my self-imposed challenges, I run, relatively speaking QRP, 500W, with the whole station running on one 120 V 20A service.  Pragmatically, heroic efforts to hear another level or two lower signals might be fruitless, although clearly, I'm not adverse to challenges, which is why I'm on the band.

3)  I'm in southern Arizona, not Maine or the Florida peninsula, propagation is different (read more difficult) here.

4)  I have researched, studied and modeled  many many other receive antennas, passive and active.  I doubt that there are any that I haven't looked at, at least casually. We have very poor ground here.  IMHO, ground-dependent antennas are a no-go.  Ones that require a bunch of radials are especially unattractive. I have enough to do to get a decent radial field under the TX antenna. (See my QRZ page) Any of these left to consideration have very broad (~100 deg) patterns that get their benefits by rejecting signals from the rear.  As stated at the outset, that isn't my big issue.  Although your experience seems to differ, I don't believe one of these beaming to England (30 deg) is going to do much to attenuate signals from NY (50 deg), for example.

Regards,

Wes  N7WS

5)  On 12/26/2018 3:31 PM, Jeff Woods wrote:
Wes,

A sure sign that your RX antennas are good enough is when DX stations that are Q5 copy repeatedly CQ in your face.

What Mike's saying is true; trying to make a silk purse out of the sow's ear that is a TX vertical is a losing game. Waller Flags, K9AYs, EWEs, etc. are all cheap and can easily be constructed to fit a 1.7 acre lot.  A short beverage may even feasible in that space, depending on the layout.

When you speak of "QRM from the east," are you talking about being unable to overpower it on TX so the DX can hear you (my problem here), or are you speaking of RX QRM?  On RX at your QTH, it doesn't appear that the proverbial East Coast Wall should affect you much.  The azimuth to Europe from Tucson is ~30 degrees.  That GC path runs across the upper Midwest and Ontario.   Even a mediocre K9AY will provide adequate attenuation to signals from the US east coast.

My NW RX antenna is centered at 42 degrees.  Here in Iowa, it hears much better to Europe than to Boston or New York. Indeed, it's nearly useless in the ARRL 160 contest because of that pattern unless I'm in Province hunting mode.

-Jeff (W0ODS)



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