Tom:
I have shunt fed the US tower HDX-589 for many years with no trouble.
The metal-to-metal section contact and lift cables appear to provide
adequate conductivity.
In my case, I have a 2 foot aluminum shunt arm hose-clamped at the top
of the third section from the bottom. I keep my tower cranked down all
the time except when QRV, so the tower goes up and down all the
time....I just let the shunt wire pile-up on the ground (same with the
control lines and coax.
Obviously your tap point will be different than mine, but it's just a
matter of experiment. Unfortunately, the shunt-arm will need to be at
the top of a section so that you can still crank it down, (with your
tower I think you will only have 4 choices !!) so getting a perfect
match can be a bit tricky. By moving the wire closer, or further from
the tower base can "fine-tune" things a bit, and if necessary, an omega
match could be used. (a gamma match gives me 1.2:1)
I tuned the tower first with a large air variable, measured the value,
and then replaced it with a coax capacitor made from RG-8.
73, de steve ve6wz.
http://www.qsl.net/ve6wz/index.html
> Does anyone have experience they can share with loading a
> crank up tower on 160? In particular I have a 72 foot US
> Tower crank up with 6 el 20, 2 el 40, and a ratable 80 dipole
> on it. Details would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks, Tom, W0ZR
_______________________________________________
See: http://www.mscomputer.com for "Self Supporting Towers", "Wireless Weather
Stations", and lot's more. Call Toll Free, 1-800-333-9041 with any questions
and ask for Sherman, W2FLA.
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