Has anyone got any input on using a 260’ long dipole cut for 1.8mhz as an all band antenna?
Unless you're going to use band traps, you will immediately run into a problem when you use the antenna on 80M, while on 160M your center-fed dipole is at a current loop, on 80M, each leg is now a 1/2 wavelength, and you are feeding each element at a high impedance point, eg., a voltage loop. So you go from having a feed-point impedance of less than 50 Ohms on 160M, to a feedpoint impedance of a few thousand Ohms on 80M, and every even harmonic thereof.
If you're not using traps, and you want decent multi-band capability, you should be designing an off-center-fed (OFC) antenna, and in one design, you could calculate the feedpoint impedance to be 450 Ohms, and use a 9:1 UnUn (because now, being an OFC, your dipole is unbalanced) with your 50 Ohms coax to feed the antenna.
How does this solve the problem of low impedance feedpoint on one band and a high impedance on another band? Now that you are OFC, the impedance of each leg of your dipole goes from high on one side to low on the other in one band, and swaps to high and low on other bands, making the total impedance around 450 Ohms.
Personally, I'd do an Inverted-L, calculate the total length of the wire to be a 1/2 wave of 160M, and OCF it at about 12 feet from the end. Using a 25:1 UnUn, and a tuner, and you'll need only two skyhooks to put up the antenna. If you make up a reel, and use about 50 feet of flat copper strap, and put pulleys on your skyhooks, and counter weight the end of your antenna, you can make your antenna tunable and resonant on everything from 160M through 6M, and not need a tuner....and if you're mechanically creative, you can motorize your reel and tune your antenna remotely!