CORRECTION
It was just pointed out to me that I neglected to mention that the
feedpoint on my 160m inverted-L was much lower than 10 feet high!
The tuner sits on the earth, and the two wires go straight up from that to
the insulator block holding the antenna and the radials, which is less than
4 feet high.
From that point, the two radials angle upwards at roughly 45° (?) to nearby
trees, and level out at 10' high to the North and to the South all the way
to the ends. (The South radial zigzags back and forth since the distance
from the base to the neighbor's fence in that direction is less than 1/4
wavelength.)
I had photos of it online, but w0btu.com crashed. Looking for a place to
upload it to.
I hope this makes sense. Sorry for the lack of details below.
73, Mike
W0BTU
On Sun, Dec 15, 2019, 8:22 PM Mike Waters <mikewate@gmail.com> wrote:
> Do the inverted-L, but use at least two 10' high 1/4 wave radials.
>
> Do NOT use an RF ground rod, or any radials on or near the earth. Just
> connect the coax shield to the junction of the radials and any remote
> tuner. At that point a good choke balun is necessary.
>
> Leaving out the choke or grounding the shield will result in very poor
> performance.
>
> 73, Mike
> W0BTU
>
>
> On Sun, Dec 15, 2019, 7:04 PM thoyer via Topband <topband@contesting.com>
> wrote:
>
>> With only 9 more to go for DXCC on 160 and all of the recent posts about
>> how good the band has been recently "best in years....) I find myself with
>> no
>> antenna for the low bands and cringing after each post on how good the
>> band has been.
>> ...
>> Options - I have a 45' tower with TH6DXX, 6m and 2m yagis. I could easily
>> string a makeshift inverted L with about 45' vertical and around 100'
>> horizontal. This I could string up in a few hours. the Horizontal portion
>> would be pointed south. Not the best of configurations but that's what I
>> have to work with. ...
>>
>> Tom
>> W3TA
>>
>>
>>
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