I've talked to Marconi ('Old Grandpa' CDX-390) around Houston TX when he had his Sirio Gain Master and is Top One antenna on an antenna switch.
When he switched from one to the other while on SSB; the SGM seemed to be much clearer than the Top One antenna. No question about it.
I'm not faulting the antenna per se. But for the new price of the SGM of $179 & S&H (another ~$40), it seems that Sirio has defeated themselves here. On one hand, the Sirio/Vector 4000/LW-150 at $140 & S&H is a better antenna. Putting a RF choke at the bottom of it may not even be necessary, according to those around me locally that run it as constructed.
If Sirio planned to build a better antenna than the Imax; they succeeded. But if they thought we would pay almost twice as much for it as the Imax; they miscalculated and are quite wrong. If an new radio operator was to buy a new antenna and wants the best bang for buck/ease of construction; then that choice would still easily be the Imax. For the Ham operator that wants five usable bands; then the Imax wins once again. Sirio can and perhaps should down price the SGM to ~$130 - which would make it at least competitive for those looking at the Imax as a solution. It also makes the LW-150/Vector 4000 look appropriately priced for what it offers too. Otherwise, the SGM is more expensive than their own LW-150/Vector 4000. Which in itself - doesn't make dollars and $ense.
Yup yup . . .
ATM - The difference being ~$40 cheaper in favor of the Vector, as well as better TX/RX for the same . . .
When he switched from one to the other while on SSB; the SGM seemed to be much clearer than the Top One antenna. No question about it.
I'm not faulting the antenna per se. But for the new price of the SGM of $179 & S&H (another ~$40), it seems that Sirio has defeated themselves here. On one hand, the Sirio/Vector 4000/LW-150 at $140 & S&H is a better antenna. Putting a RF choke at the bottom of it may not even be necessary, according to those around me locally that run it as constructed.
If Sirio planned to build a better antenna than the Imax; they succeeded. But if they thought we would pay almost twice as much for it as the Imax; they miscalculated and are quite wrong. If an new radio operator was to buy a new antenna and wants the best bang for buck/ease of construction; then that choice would still easily be the Imax. For the Ham operator that wants five usable bands; then the Imax wins once again. Sirio can and perhaps should down price the SGM to ~$130 - which would make it at least competitive for those looking at the Imax as a solution. It also makes the LW-150/Vector 4000 look appropriately priced for what it offers too. Otherwise, the SGM is more expensive than their own LW-150/Vector 4000. Which in itself - doesn't make dollars and $ense.
Yup yup . . .
ATM - The difference being ~$40 cheaper in favor of the Vector, as well as better TX/RX for the same . . .
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