MFJ-998 Performance
Putting the MFJ-998 to Work
I've covered all of the major functions of the MFJ-998, so the only thing left is to describe how it has been working for me.
So far, I've tried this tuner on two different antennas, and I intend to try it on several others. My primary test has been on an Alpha Delta DX-CC. This antenna is a fan dipole for 10, 20, 40, and 80 meters, with loading coils to shorten the 80m segment. Generally, the tuner has no trouble tuning the band edges for each band that the antenna is cut for, so the interesting test is how well it tunes the WARC and other bands. I've also experimented with tuning all the bands on my Cushcraft R6000 vertical, which is designed for 6m-20m.
When you first initiate the tuning cycle, the tuner takes anywhere from a few seconds to about 30 seconds to find a match that is equal to, or lower than the target SWR you set in the menu. Once it finds a suitable match, the tuner stores the capacitance and inductance settings into memory, and the next time you key up within several kc's of the stored frequency, the tuner switches instantaneously to the correct setting. Thus, the best thing to do when you install this tuner is to switch to each band to initiate a tuning cycle to allow the tuner to store an initial setting for that frequency. If you use an antenna with narrow bandwidth on a particular band, tune up each of the band edges. After you do this initial procedure, your future tuning cycles will either be instant or only take a few seconds.
This tuner has no trouble tuning my 80, 40, 20, 10 meter dipole fed with coax for 60, 30, 15, and 17 meters. Unfortunately, I could not get the tuner to load up 12 meters upon initial installation. The original tuner that i replaced was an Ameritron ATR-30 manual tuner, which will load up a paper clip. The ATR-30 had no problem with 12 meters, but the MFJ-998 would not.
It's important to understand that no auto tuner is infinitely capable due to the way they are designed. With a good manual tuner with a roller inductor, the operator has almost an infinite range of adjusting inductance, as well as adjustments to capacitance on both the transceiver and antenna side of the antenna circuit. However with an auto tuner, the capacitance is applied to either the transceiver or the antenna side. The MFJ-998 will attempt to apply the capacitance to either side to find the lowest match, but it cannot apply capacitance to both sides at the same time. As a result, auto tuner's tuning ranges are always limited. The MFJ-998 is no different.
When using auto-tuners with odd antenna lengths, you will quickly discover that the feed line length matters. The MFJ-998's manual does a good job of outlining the feed line considerations that can affect the tuning capabilities. To get the tuner to load up 12 meters on the fan dipole, adjusting the coax length was the trick for me.
Interestingly enough, I was able to tune all bands between 80 meters and 10 meters on the Cushcraft R6000. I already knew that the R6000 was resonant around 4Khz, but I really wasn't expecting the tuner to be capable of tuning the entire 80 and 40 meter band, as well as 60m. The tuner is NOT designed for 6 meters. If you attempt to use it there, the frequency counter will not only be unable detect the correct frequency, it will also not be able to load up the antenna as desired.
Transceiver SWR Protection Considerations
Occasionally when trying to load up an antenna that presents a very high SWR to the transceiver, it will be difficult to get the MFJ-998 to start the tuning process while in Auto mode. This behavior is caused by the transceiver detecting a high SWR condition and reducing the power output below the necessary power level to make the MFJ-998 start it's tuning cycle. Fortunately, there is a trick to making this work: While emitting a carrier, press either the L-UP or L-DOWN buttons to manually change the tuner inductance. After only a couple of changes, you will likely find an inductance setting that will cause the antenna's impedance to show a low enough SWR to the transceiver to cause it to output enough power for the MFJ-998 to start it's tuning cycle.
I've compared the SWR readings on the MFJ-998 to both external and internal transceiver meters and will discuss these finding next. The results are interesting...