About 10 years ago, I built a 2-element quad using whatever parts I could find that would work. I designed it using the info that I found here:
https://www.lral.lv/4_element_quad.htm
I made the boom out of 2" schedule 40 yellow drainage pipe. The hubs were made from cable reels that the mujer at the local hardware store gave me. The spreaders were 3/8" dia extruded aluminum curtain rods with 3 foot 1/8" dia fiberglas rod stock on the ends. I used #10 enameled copper motor winding wire for the elements. I wound a matching balun to get the correct 50 ohm impedance and also wound a choke to eliminate common-mode currents.
Hub and spreader arm assy. I clipped the screws and cleaned up the rough edges
Finished antenna mounted atop a 36' guadua pole. The black square at the bottom of the antenna is the common mode choke. This antenna worked flawlessly for 5 years. I lost it in a horrendous windstorm because I never guyed the guadua mast which snapped at the base. I won't make that mistake again.
The antenna on the day we put it up. Just barely beat the rain. The things that look like guy wires are actually the ropes we used to pull it up.
This was a great antenna and I used it to communicate with many forum members in the US. Once I got all of the parts together it only took a week to assemble.
- 399
https://www.lral.lv/4_element_quad.htm
I made the boom out of 2" schedule 40 yellow drainage pipe. The hubs were made from cable reels that the mujer at the local hardware store gave me. The spreaders were 3/8" dia extruded aluminum curtain rods with 3 foot 1/8" dia fiberglas rod stock on the ends. I used #10 enameled copper motor winding wire for the elements. I wound a matching balun to get the correct 50 ohm impedance and also wound a choke to eliminate common-mode currents.
Hub and spreader arm assy. I clipped the screws and cleaned up the rough edges
Finished antenna mounted atop a 36' guadua pole. The black square at the bottom of the antenna is the common mode choke. This antenna worked flawlessly for 5 years. I lost it in a horrendous windstorm because I never guyed the guadua mast which snapped at the base. I won't make that mistake again.
The antenna on the day we put it up. Just barely beat the rain. The things that look like guy wires are actually the ropes we used to pull it up.
This was a great antenna and I used it to communicate with many forum members in the US. Once I got all of the parts together it only took a week to assemble.
- 399