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A number of issues have been raised here
that deserve some further comment. Regarding RF coupling to the standing rigging, don't be overly concerned. You will be coupled to the rigging no matter where you place the antenna. Some geometries will doubtless be worse than others, but it will be difficult to predict in advance. Moreover, such coupling is not necessarily a bad thing. It is just a difficult thing to model and thus more of an unknown. Regarding antenna length, more is not necessarily better and may be worse! But whether worse or better, changing the length of an antenna may make it different. For example, if you are crossing oceans and want reliable skip communication over great distances, you want low radiation angles. A quarter-wave or 5/8-wave vertical will be your best choice. That would be about 16 feet in length at 14 MHz. Make your antenna 32 feet long and you have a half-wave vertical with very little low-angle radiation at 14 MHz, but at 7 MHz and below, low-angle radiation will be plentiful. Which is better depends on your objectives. Operating near the coast, you may find that higher radiation angles produce shorter skip zones to your advantage. Were your boat fiberglass or wood instead of steel, it is possible that a horizontal antenna laid on the deck would outperform any vertical antenna for high radiation angle communications with a range of say 400 miles. Think about maintaining solid ssb contact with boats scattered throughout the Bahamas, for example. With vertical antennas such a task would be quite difficult. Start out your planning with some consideration of which distances are most important. From that, move to which frequencies and radiation angles provide the appropriate skip zones to achieve those distances, and from there, consider antenna options that further those objectives. Good luck Chuck |
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