Interested in how more experienced folks than myself have solved the mast to antenna isolation issue
That's a good idea, worth knowing for future use.I use blue water pipe put on mast.
The mast becomes part of the antenna when connected , I don't have a good way of explaining this but the mast is taking away from the the antennas resonance, or robbing usefull power , one example was imagine the antenna is a barrel and your filling it with water,( rf power) the mast and coax are a hole in the bottom the water leaks out the holes, plug the hole and less rf power is lost, I'm not sure I explained that right, or how to isolate when a rotor is involved...sooooo what is isolating the mast going to do?
I will try that just for experimental purpose, been putting it there on my home brew 1/4 wave antennas, I don't have a common mode issue, it's quiet as a mouse like it is, if it's a resonance thing I would say worth trying, but doesn't really make sense to me otherwiseyou should consider moving your choke coil to 1/4 wl down from the connector.
I will try that just for experimental purpose, been putting it there on my home brew 1/4 wave antennas, I don't have a common mode issue, it's quiet as a mouse like it is, if it's a resonance thing I would say worth trying, but doesn't really make sense to me otherwise
The mast becomes part of the antenna when connected , I don't have a good way of explaining this but the mast is taking away from the the antennas resonance, or robbing usefull power , one example was imagine the antenna is a barrel and your filling it with water,( rf power) the mast and coax are a hole in the bottom the water leaks out the holes, plug the hole and less rf power is lost, I'm not sure I explained that right, or how to isolate when a rotor is involved