Easier said than done. The controller uses a 25 pin connector. He would
have to cut the cable and then solder up a connector.
I have a 300 ft run of cable in Colorado and have had no issues at all.
I assume they use a better power supply than the 33v one that I have. Then
again the box would have to account for that added voltage. I would be
curious to know just how much or little voltage is at the motors.
It might be worth it to unsolder the directors off the connector and see if
it works with 2 elements or unsolder all but the Driven.
I know there have been a bunch of posts on this. I guess nobody tried
running out the elements through the 500 ft of cable while on the ground?
I assume the cable does not have any kinks or hard turns in it and all the
motors have been tested for the proper readings?
Mike W0MU
-----Original Message-----
From: towertalk-bounces@contesting.com
[mailto:towertalk-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of NPAlex@aol.com
Sent: Sunday, June 10, 2007 10:34 PM
To: towertalk@contesting.com; 489278.4976.qm@web51609.mail.re2.yahoo.com
Subject: [TowerTalk] SteppIR problem
Bill,
Given that you have a 500 ft run, the first thing I would do is take the
controller out to the base of the tower where the cable length is more
typical and
see if all works well then. If so, run heavier wire from the shack to the
tower base and that should solve the problem.
But you have to find out if the antenna and its motors/ controller work when
"locally" connected before just changing out parts.
Norm W4QN
==============================================================
In a message dated 6/10/2007 5:14:07 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
towertalk-request@contesting.com writes:
Message-ID: <489278.4976.qm@web51609.mail.re2.yahoo.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Greetings to all Tower Talkers,
A very wise man and fellow TT (K7LXC) suggested I post
my challenge here to the group...maybe somebody will
have a new idea that I've not explored.
Last week we put up a new 4L SteppIR with a 40/30
dipole. The antenna is approximately 500 feet from
the shack. SteppIR control line is used, continously
without any accessories inserted, running through 3
inch conduit (not that that makes any difference).
Prior to lifting it in the air I found that a problem
existed. When attempts were made to change bands or
even frequency on the same band, the control box went
dead. Simultaneously, as the box died, the "on"
indicator light on the pwr supply went out. A second
later the pwr light came back on; the led "lights" on
the control box flashed once but the box remained off.
The box could be turned back on, but the same
sequence occurred if a band/freq change was attempted.
Immediately all of the wiring and continuity was
checked with the antenna...all ok. Spoke with Jerry
at SteppIR and we proceeded to change first control
box....before I realized the pwr supply was
faltering....no change.
The next step was to attempt to run each motor
individually and in groups. Each motor ran
individually without problem. Adding the 2nd and 3rd
motor caused no problems....the yagi functioned fine.
The addition of the 4th motor (didn't matter which
sequence), consistently killed the antenna. On
occassion it would all seem to work for a couple of
band changes but never more than 1 or 2 minutes - with
all 4 motors running. So, with up to 3 motors
running...all ok, with all 4, no go. However, this is
a 4 element yagi. After speaking again with Jerry, I
was reassured that the problem was simply a power
supply and all will work fine....thus the long
scheduled antenna raising event went forward as
scheduled. Needless-to-say, the replacement power
supply did not correct the problem.
Prior to erecting the yagi I extended the elements to
14150 so it can be used as a monobander...but that
will only bring temporary happiness. A power supply
(3rd) was "hand picked" by the SteppIR engineers,
sent, and tested this morning. Basically the same
problem. It did seem to work briefly then shut
down....exactly the same as before.
So, I'm looking for ideas that have been overlooked.
Yes, I should have listened to my gut, rather than the
"experts" and canceled the raising until all problems
were fixed, but that can't be undone. If this beast
must be lowered, I'm a bit reluctant to put it back up
after this experience. Yes, all antennas have
problems but it would be less $$ to replace it at the
time of lowering rather then taking down, bring the
crane back and forth, etc.
Sorry for the long-windedness of this but any and all
thoughts are appreciated!
************************************** See what's free at
http://www.aol.com.
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