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It's hard to believe the marine version of the Outbacker was very
efficient, but it probably was better than nothing at all. Yeah, other than traps, the only other reliable technique I can think of for a multiband (as opposed to simply a "wideband") antenna is to use switched, tuned feeders (open wire line stubs actually, cut to tune a dipole to each band). I have a difficult time imagining that on a sailboat! Anyway, that stretches the idea of "no tuner", but at least there are no moving parts other than the band switch. Well, now that I think of it, there are some common antennas that work on more than one band without a tuner or traps. A simple 40 meter dipole (or quarter-wave vertical) ought to work on 15 meters, for example. And the G5RV, and some sky loop antennas are multiband. A vertical (cut the horizontal one in half) G5RV would be interesting to consider. I don't think I've encountered that before and matching might be interesting, but it may have potential for backstay antennas. These antennas usually benefit from a rig with a built-in tuner, so maybe they should be "disqualified" as not tuner-less. Chuck, NT3G s/v Sans Serif Doug Dotson wrote: I supose that one could make a trap-vertical to avoid a tuner, but I've never seen one for marine bands. I do recall a version of the OutBacker that was for marine use but have never known anyone that had one. Doug, k3qt s/v Callista |
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