Ah, Gotham. Their aluminum quads were really uh, interesting. A friend
got some good use out of the aluminum spreaders...he made a 15 meter Yagi
out of them.
K4XS/KH7XS aka WV2ZPK (1962)
In a message dated 1/6/2016 11:32:01 P.M. Coordinated Universal Time,
larryb.w1dyj@verizon.net writes:
In 1962, as newly minted novice KN1VFX, I purchased a Gotham V80. The ad
said it was the best thing to work the world on 80M CW, and radials were
not
"required."
You can't beat physics! I've learned a lot since... (And I don't
believe
ads any more either.)
73 -- Larry -- W1DYJ
-----Original Message-----
From: Herbert Schoenbohm
Sent: Tuesday, January 05, 2016 7:41
To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Barker & Williamson Model AC - 1.8 - 30 Antenna
This B&W Antenna sort of reminds me of the infamous MaxCom antenna feed
which gave a VSWR of less that 2:1 from 1.8 to 30 Mhz sold for a while
in the 70's and 80's. After scamming thousands of hams with these claims
the ARRL lab put the potted matching unit into a X-ray device and
learned that it was nothing more that a series of toaster elements
across the feed point inside or a dummy load on the end of your coax
with some wire attached to it. The B&W is sort of a throw back of the
TF2D military antenna which at least did a bit more radiating as a
folded dipole with a 600 ohms non inductive resistor in the center of
the top wire. Having said that most any end fed wire with a resistor to
ground at the far end makes for a quieter antenna on reception in many
cases. But again to market such a product without any clear indication
of what it really can do continues to be the way of many amateur antenna
devices sold to the unsuspecting.
Herb Schoenbohm, KV4FZ
On 1/5/2016 1:18 AM, Jim Brown wrote:
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> On Mon,1/4/2016 7:47 PM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
>> All I could find was a sketch so I'm not sure how it works.
>
> John,
>
> From the sketch on the Universal Radio website, I analyze it as a loop,
> formed by the wire, the ground rods, and the earth. The clue is that
they
> tell you to add a wire between the ends if you're putting it on a roof.
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
> _______________________________________________
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