| >And for how long did 468/f rest resplendent in the books,
>unquestioned, until Joe Common Ham got his mits on antenna modeling
>software?"
When I was a kid, the ARRL handbook offered 468/f as an approximation 
of the length of a dipole @ 1/2 wave height.  It was stated rather clearly 
that trimming would be required to accomodate site-variables.  
Last week, I cut an 80m dipole using 468/f as a starting point. Went up as
an inverted Vee.  Took perhaps 10 minutes with a meter to trim off a foot 
from each end, precisely as expected.  (I always add a foot on 80 & 40,
just to give me room to trim.  THAT they didn't put in the handbook!)   
Evidence suggests that 468/f is still a workable approximation.
It would seem that Joe Common Ham may suffer from an over-reliance on 
model data, or a lack of common sense in applying it.
Perhaps it's the expectation that you can predict unseen environmental 
variables with any precision whatever.  
Jim Jarvis, N2EA
Essex, VT
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