The performance of an HF antenna is in direct proportion to its ugliness.
Doc, W5LZ
Sums up the chase. Appearance notwithstanding (I like odd stuff), the Texas Bugcatcher gets accolades in beating out screwdrivers, etc, in
mobile antenna shoot-outs.
And it’s said to be a pain to set up first time.
And, its more maintenance-intensive than I want for an antenna installed on a trailer roof. Let’s leave aside I won’t be climbing a telescoping ladder to change a tap.
Bugcatcher = clip to tap coil moved painstaking small changes.
Screwdriver = mechanical (internal) rotary movement to do same.
ALPHA FMJ = external tuner to initiate changes.
The TBC is more
visually-arresting than I want (at this time) for an antenna on the trailer roof needs to be
sorta low key with MORE performance than a quarter-wave whip.
It was great background reading to today’s other activities.
Just sure as heck I want one. I can see plenty of opportunities from apartment balcony to a BEEG one on a tripod mount, etc.
Glad I’ve held off on the Dodge pickup puck mount. Might go for a BIG OLD TEXAS BUGCATCHER and swat mudducks out on The Big Road, . . . frighten the horses, make the children cry, and cause the women to faint.
I found it common that a review would state, “
okay, it’s not as good as my Texas Bugcatcher, BUT . . . “
At least one review of the ALPHA Moto FMJ 6-40 stated such.
But, that the FMJ was a little quieter. (No perfect HF mobile antennas).
The FMJ “works” for me being low key. And
a simpler installation. No guying, no giant mount plate, etc. Next to no maintenance (I’ll probably get a cover for it).
TBC an antenna I’d have to remove to go down the road.
More than all else — what started this thread — is the desire for a permanent roof antenna. I see now (thanks, Gary, groundwire, Undertaker, and others) that it may as well be an antenna does MORE than just 11-Meter.
No decisions made. No money spent. (Yet).
.