That's a lot of bad advice all rolled into one.

1.  Low voltage at the antenna does not mean low voltage at the shack end of the feedline.  That's why it's called VSWR.

2.  Low voltage at the antenna does not mean low voltages internal to the tuner, which can be quite high depending upon the degree of non-resonance.  You aren't necessarily "making life easier for the matching unit" at all.

3.  Multi-band antennas mean highly variable pattern from band to band.  The same antenna might have a peak to the U.S. (from England) on one band and a major notch on another band.  If you don't care about pattern, dummy loads match pretty easy too.

Multi-band antennas are fine as long as you recognize that they are a compromise.  I'd be interested in the reason why an antenna properly designed for a particular band is a bad idea.

Dave   AB7E



On 7/31/2020 2:04 AM, CUTTER DAVID via Elecraft wrote:
With Elecraft matching units you don't need (and it can be undesirable to have) 
antennas made for a particular band.  You make life easier for the matching 
unit by making your antenna non-resonant on bands you want to use.  That way 
the unit does not have to cope with especially high voltages which are most 
likely to cause internal damage. Save your time, weight, money for other 
options.

David G3UNA



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