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Hello Gordon,
The 20th edition of the ARRL Antenna Handbook has some information on a 40 meter, masthead half-sloper as you described. You might find that interesting. As Doug mentioned, this is basically a single-band antenna, except that it would probably work ok on odd harmonic frequencies. And it would very definitely radiate on other frequencies in an emergency, provided you used an appropriate tuner. Good luck! Chuck Gordon Wedman wrote: Over the holidays I killed some time looking through a few back issues of Cruising World. In the April 1986 issue a boat-based ham operator said he used a top-fed backstay antenna with excellent results AND he had no in-hull ground plane. He said he connected the shield from his feed wire to the mast-side of the backstay and this allowed the mast and all the standing rigging to act as a ground plane. He didn't say anything about using stand-offs between the feed wire and the mast. I would think you would get a lot of signal loss over that much length if you didn't use stand-offs? If a person could put up with the appearance and make sure the whole set-up didn't get torn down by sails/running rigging, would this really give good performance? I don't recall reading about this type of set-up so I guess its not too common on recreational boats but maybe it could be worth considering in some situations? |
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