The antenna was simple. 300 feet of solid core 20 gauge copper wire. I ran
it from the 500 ohm connector of my R-75, out of the shack and all the way
into the back yard. The yard extends about 200 feet, so I had to double the
wire back in the direction of the shack for 100 feet.
No mater what I tune the dial to, I'm getting splashed from the local 50
kilowatt am stations. The preselector doesn't clean it up either.
Every time I exceed 200 feet of wire, I have the same problem.
Weird...
Michael
> No mater what I tune the dial to, I'm getting splashed from the local 50
> kilowatt am stations. The preselector doesn't clean it up either.
>
> Every time I exceed 200 feet of wire, I have the same problem.
Sounds like your front end is being overloaded by the AM stations. I guess
the simple solution would be to not exceed 200 feet of wire. A 200' random
wire should work well, I'd think. But if you have local 50 KW stations,
then it's not unusual to get a lot of imaging and intermod with a long
antenna.
--
Tom Sevart N2UHC
Frontenac, KS
http://www.geocities.com/n2uhc
I have Beverage antennas of 450 and 700 feet, oriented toward my desired
targets *and* (unfortunately) a number of 50kw MW stations in the
Seattle/Tacoma area. I also have a 1 kw station 1.4 miles off the end of one
of the antennas. I have a number of S-9+65db stations on the dial, but my
R-75 and IC-756Pro handle them well. However, I'm not using the hi-Z input
but the 50-ohm unbalanced input via a Beverage matching transformer and
grounded, double-shielded coax.
Have you tried adding a transformer and the 50-ohm input?
Guy Atkins
Puyallup, WA USA
"Michael" <md1...@optonline.net> wrote in message
news:VseQd.3598$sb1....@fe11.lga...
It's not a flop if you learned something.
Could be overload problem with a longer wire.
How about using that 300 foot wire for a three sided loop? 100 feet
toward the back, then 100 across the back of the yard and 100 feet back
where you started. Connect one end to shield and the other to the center
conductor of a coax lead-in.
--
Telamon
Ventura, California
Doesn't doubling the wire back null the effect of the same length of wire?
1: - What 50 watt station ??
2: What kind of Pre selector are you using?
I have a MFJ - 1046 pre selector; It's very good
Dan / NYC
You might want to put a high pass filter in place between
the longwire and the preselector, nulling out the AM band
as much as possible before the preselector. When I lived
closer to the antenna for WCKY 1530, I homebrewed one
that got rid of the AM BCB band. You can find the schematics
for one in the ARRL handbook or one of Joe Carr's Tech Notes
on DXing.com: http://www.dxing.com/tnotes/tnote06.pdf
--Mike L.
--Mike L.
Hiya, Guy.... That is exactly what I already have currently with one of my
roof antennas, the 200' "Frankenstein. That antenna is ideal !!!! A great
DX'ing antenna. Detailed info is on my web page. See the link in my
signature. I just decided to try the 300' wire with no additional dressings
like transformers or coax feeds. The end result... The local AM flame
throwers are strong enough to overload the front end even on an R-75.
--
Respectfully,
Michael
Location: New Jersey
Primary Receiver: R-75 with full Kiwa mods
Antennas: G5RV, 200ft "Frankenstein" roof wire
Additional Radios: 7600GR,KA-1101,KA-1102
PL-550, KA-989, Info-Mate 837, GE-SR III
Westinghouse H-104 (seven tube)
Web Site: http://md_dxing.tripod.com
I did and I tried the att also. Even with the att switched on, the local AM
stations still overload the radio. It is just too much wire for my
location. North NJ is the king of the MW transmitters. Lots of ground
water and excellent conductivity. I just cant use that much wire.
Michael
Dan... I hear 66, and 77. My preselector is an MFJ-1048. Same as you have
but you can use it to transmit too. 300 feet is just too much wire here, I
think. My 200 foot antenna is OK, but 300 feet at ground level is just too
much wire. Given the ground conductivity here, I'm not sure if the antenna
was just soaking the signal up MW signals right from the ground.
Check out my two antennas on my web site. Both of these work great. 300
feet was just too much. The link to my web site is in my signature.
Intermod...
Michael
I used a similar solution with my roof wire. It is folded in a unique
manner. It is debatable whether or not that half the length of the 200'
receiving wire is nulled out because of the way it is folded.
--
My Family Website-->
http://mysite.verizon.net/res868sp/thetriantafilosfamily/index.html My
Amatuer Radio Website--> http://www.qsl.net/kb9ygd/index.html
http://dx.qsl.net/logs <---Search My Logbook
"Michael Lawson" <mtl@[REMOVE-TO-REPLY]fuse.net> wrote in message
news:0xnQd.493$qM....@fe37.usenetserver.com...
I rather doubt that either your G5RV or the Frankenstein are great DX
antennas, the way they are laid out. Both are liable to favour short to
medium distances below 10MHz and are unlikely to provide the necessary
low elevation angle sensitivity for really long DX in all desired
directions at any frequency. I think you would be better off with less
wire, laid out straight to take advantage of directional properties.
Three mutually orthogonal antennas with a switch would be great. Attach
a vertical antenna, say a CB whip or longer, to your chimney, as high
as possible, for one. Run two independent dipoles in a cross pattern,
even an X like you have would be a good compromise, from the chimney.
Then you can switch among them for best reception - often one will
stand out above the others because of direction, polarisation,
frequency, and arrival angle of the incoming signal will best match one
antenna.
Regards,
Tom