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Gw
 
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Default use standoffs between SSB coax and backstay??

I see this all the time on cruising boats not most, not many but a
few. I always try to argue with the person that installed it on the
pros and cons but never get anyone that can talk rf to me. best I had
was an extra class ham that just said it works better because I can
hear the difference.

Distributed capacitance should be taken care of by the antenna tuner
(all random length end fed vertical wire antennas on boats have tuners
I think) So I guess the reason is to keep stray rf from coupling and
reflecting back from the backstay. I would think that a ¼ wavelength
distance from the backstay to the gto-15 should be good. But since you
will be using it on many bands I would guess that at least 1/8
wavelength at the lowest frequency would be someplace to start from.
Maybe about 10 meters separation between backstay and gto-15 may make
a measurable difference. 2 inches of separation, less then 1
electrical degree ROTFLMAO at anyone who says it makes a difference.





sded wrote in message . ..
"Gordon Wedman" wrote:

The other day I was wandering around one of our marinas trying to steal
ideas from other boats and I came across an aluminum pilot-house sloop that
may have come over from Europe. I noticed that the SSB coax was held away
from the backstay turnbuckle and wire by ~1 inch plastic spacers. I've
never seen this before and the previous owner didn't do it on my boat. I've
been thinking of upgrading the ancient SSB system on my boat and was
wondering if these standoffs were something recommended.
Anyone know about these? Thanks
Gord

Standoffs are highly recommended to eliminate coupling/signal loss between the
leadin and the backstay below the insulators. I made mine by running plastic
wire ties through shrink wrap tubing-a loop around the backstay, through the
tubing, a loop around the wire. About 2" long is good. Not coax at this point,
but High Voltage wire, BTW. Easy to do, and does help performance.