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"Jerry Peters" wrote: I have been researching SSB installation issues and am left with a couple of questions. First, antenna installation. I intent to use a long wire through a tuner to operate on HF. I intend to use an insulated shroud (I have a cat with no backstay) with a short feed from the tuner. I have always believed that the feed wire should be seaparated from the rigging before it reaches the connection point to reduce capacitive reactance. I have accomplished this in the past with 2" spacers holding the wire off of the shroud until it reached the connection point. Recently, I read a credible opinion that separation of an inch or two is irrelevant at high frequencies because to eliminate all capacitive reactance the seaparation would have to be meters. The capacitive reactance that does exist can be accomodated with the tuner. If this is true I would prefer to directly attach a long insulated wire to the shroud - perhaps tape it over a 25 foot length. It would be out of the way, safe from rf burn risk and would not require the installation of rigging isolators which introduce mechanical weakness and expense. My second set of questions relate to ground plane/counterpoise installation but I'll hold of on those quetions for the moment. Thanks for your help. Jerry, You have designed the system correctly for most situations by having the feedline standing off the grounded part of the shroud line, to eliminate a big output capacitance for the tuner to deal with. The addition of external Capacitance to modern autotuners will cause them to "Thrash around" a lot more while trying to tune anywhere close to the 1/2 wave resonace of the antenna. Autotuners just don't have the brains to do this tuning job well if they are presented with external output capacitance. I would worry more about that than having a crewperson "burned by RF" while transmitting. It just doesn't happen if the crew is properly trained and instructed. On most plastic vessels they just become part of the antenna and detune things a bit, because they aren't really grounded if they are just standing on the deck, and happen to grab the antenna shroud while the transmitter is active. Goggle this group for a complete course on designing a LOW IMPEDANCE RF Ground System for MF?HF Operations. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
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