Yeah, I assumed one at the feedpoint. I was referring to the situation
where you might want to add another one. I still think that should go
at a current maximum if possible.
Dave AB7E
On 1/25/2026 8:44 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
On 1/25/2026 3:08 PM, David Gilbert wrote:
Yes ... but I assume that we want to place the CMC as close to a
current maximum as we can, so we kind of need to know where that is.
Am I wrong about that?
In general, no. In the common mode circuit, the feedline, whether coax
or two-wire, becomes part of the antenna. The number one reason for
using a choke is to prevent current on the antenna from coupling to
the antenna, that mostly happens at the feedpoint. We want it to look
as much as possible like an egg insulator at the frequency(ies) of
interest. This current consists of both signal and noise. It can, for
example, fill in the nulls of directional antennas.
W6GJB's contesting trailer, which we use for expeditions to activate
rare counties in state QSO parties, has a 45 ft repurposed pneumatic
mast (probably from a TV news truck) on which Glen has rigged a 20M
yagi, a 40M dipole, and an 80M inverted Vee. We run the 40M dipole on
15M. The feedpoints of these antennas are within about two feet. With
chokes, RX bandpass filters, and optimally placed double stubs, we can
run two K3/KPA500 CW stations on bands related by their second
harmonic! That is, 80 and 40, and 40 and 20. Remove one of those
chokes and we cannot. We learned this when Glen replaced one of the
feedlines (for maintenance) and forgot to install the choke.
In a multi-transmitter environment, "you can't give anything away!"
73, Jim K9YC
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