Found this article interesting on bandwidth and efficiency.
http://www.copperelectronics.com/articles/big_coil_antennas_exposed.php
http://www.copperelectronics.com/articles/big_coil_antennas_exposed.php
That's interesting, the old school ads are just down right awesome. Those were definitely the days. The big momma ad is top notch marketing, would all kinds of upset and offend a certain crowd this day in age though.Found this article interesting on bandwidth and efficiency.
http://www.copperelectronics.com/articles/big_coil_antennas_exposed.php
29 MHz is very close to 27 MHz for a quarter wave (non-loaded) whip, which is why the 102 inch whip SWR is 2:1 at 29 MHz. It is the opposite of "very out of band", it is in-band. You only lose 11% power heating your coax at 2:1 SWR. Here's the power loss chart:Yes this will "work" but remember the tuner is only fooling the radio and not the antenna. You will still have a very out of band antenna.
A 17m HamStick is a center-loaded (center coil) antenna which is inherently a narrowband design. You're right in that if the OP wanted to run 40 meters mobile as well as 20m, 17m, 15m, 12m, 11m, and 10m, then yeah, a base loaded screwdriver tunable coil would be best.I did something similar before I got the screwdriver, I used a 17 meter hamstick and used a LDG tuner to load it up on other bands. It worked but the screwdriver worked so much better both TX and RX
You really want the base of the antenna up at the roofline if you're that close to the back of the cab. Try getting the antenna above the roofline, or move the antenna back along the bed so it is further away from the cab. At 6 meters, the majority of the antenna is going to be below the roofline on a toolbox mount. At 54 MHz and above, consider a mag mount on the roof or through-the-roof NMO hole mount centered on the roof.Thanks guys.
No rack on the truck. Extended cab. Until now I've been using a bed toolbox mount about a foot behind the cab. I have two mounts, one on each side, because I tried installing a six meter mobile. No success. Still have an option in that.
Are the AM and SSB measurements on a peak-reading wattmeter?From the factory:
AM - High 12w to ~50w, Low 2w to 8w
SSB - " ~60W
FM - " 50w
Yes, they are.Are the AM and SSB measurements on a peak-reading wattmeter?
Homer about the only thing that will come close to a good screwdriver is those Hustler antennas...You get the foldover masts that are 54" long then add the 10 / 11 /12 meter loads close to 7ft long to end...The mast puts the center loads above the cab line in clear space...Hard to find anything to rival that set-up.
With the Tri-band adaptor can have 10/11/12 meters off of one stick..
I used those Hustlers for years before screwdriver antenna....
No Hamstick or base load style antenna will work better!
All the Best
Gary
I really don't like using a tuner with coax because it's too lossy and adds complexity that is just not needed for 10-11M.How about just using a small auto tuner?
I'd use a longer antenna cut for a low SWR on CB and then use an auto tuner when on 10 or 12 meters if needed.
Or maybe adjust the antenna for the band you are most likely to be on the most and use the tuner for the other.
Now that I think of it, I suppose the power level that some radios are at might make the choice of auto tuner a problem.