Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-22 Thread n5ge

If you can see the board impressions in the coax, it's toast.  Replace it.

You didn't say what kind of coax it is, but 9913 is very easily crushed.
According to Mosley, the maker of many military antennas, that's why the
military doesn't use it on the ground or in the ground.  They use RG213, which
will not crush when run over by vehicles with tires.

On Thu, 20 Oct 2011 21:21:02 -0400 (EDT), gold...@charter.net wrote:

[snip]
Right now I am thinking that I have a bad coax line outside of the 
house.  The reason for this is that I had a new propane tank installed 
and they needed to back the truck up and had to drive over the buried 
coax.  I did put boards down to spread out the load and protect the lawn 
and also the coax.  However the problem has started since this incident.

I pulled the coax out of the ground and it has bend marks at the edges 
where the boards were which to means that it was deformed and maybe it 
is now crushed.

[snip]

73,
Tom
Amateur Radio Operator N5GE
ARRL Lifetime Member
QCWA Lifetime Member


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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-22 Thread Jim Brown
On 10/22/2011 9:33 AM, n...@n5ge.com wrote:
 According to Mosley, the maker of many military antennas, that's why the
 military doesn't use it on the ground or in the ground.  They use RG213, which
 will not crush when run over by vehicles with tires.

That information is probably rather dated. Although RG-numbers used to 
be a specification for cable (MANY years ago), they are now no more than 
a generic description of size and impedance.  You must get to a 
manufacturer's part number and data sheet to know what a cable really is.

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-22 Thread n5ge

The point made by Mosley was that the 9913 *style* coax can be crushed easily
due to the material used for insulation between the center conductor and the
shield. RG213 *style* coax does not suffer from that deficiency.

I suppose I could have looked up the MIL STD number of both the coaxes and
referred to them in that way, but if I had done so, only experts in reading MIL
STD numbers would have got the point.

Thank you for passing on your knowledge regarding coax, Jim.

73,
Tom
Amateur Radio Operator N5GE
ARRL Lifetime Member
QCWA Lifetime Member


On Sat, 22 Oct 2011 09:42:17 -0700, Jim Brown j...@audiosystemsgroup.com 
wrote:

On 10/22/2011 9:33 AM, n...@n5ge.com wrote:
 According to Mosley, the maker of many military antennas, that's why the
 military doesn't use it on the ground or in the ground.  They use RG213, 
 which
 will not crush when run over by vehicles with tires.

That information is probably rather dated. Although RG-numbers used to 
be a specification for cable (MANY years ago), they are now no more than 
a generic description of size and impedance.  You must get to a 
manufacturer's part number and data sheet to know what a cable really is.

73, Jim K9YC
[snip]

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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-22 Thread Jim Brown
On 10/22/2011 1:02 PM, n...@n5ge.com wrote:
 The point made by Mosley was that the 9913*style*  coax can be crushed easily
 due to the material used for insulation between the center conductor and the
 shield. RG213*style*  coax does not suffer from that deficiency.

Understood, Tom. And yes, right on target.

73, Jim
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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-21 Thread Jim Brown
On 10/20/2011 6:21 PM, gold...@charter.net wrote:
 I apparently have a bigger problem with RF in the shack and it has
 nothing to do with the loop.

Hi Don,

Your email, and some of the solutions offered, reflect some common 
misconceptions about RFI, including an earth connection as a solution 
(it is NOT), and SWR as a cause (it is NOT).  The usefulness of noting 
changes from the original SWR values is that it tells you SOMETHING HAS 
CHANGED in the antenna, so that you know to go looking for something 
that is broken.

I strongly suggest that you download and study my tutorial on RFI for 
Hams. Nearly all problems blamed on RF in the shack are really caused 
by Pin One Problems in equipment where the RF is detected, and by 
antenna systems that put RF on the outside of the coax.

Study   http://audiosystemsgroup.com/RFI-Ham.pdf

One question to ask is, What ELSE, besides that coax, might have 
changed between before when everything worked, and now, when I have 
RFI.  Think about cable connections between equipment in the shack that 
might be acting as antennas to bring that RF that your antennas are 
radiating into the equipment.  And think about this -- your antennas 
SHOULD be putting a lot of RF in your shack -- they must do this if they 
are working as antennas. Any cables connected to your equipment will act 
as receiving antennas. When equipment has a Pin One Problem, the RF 
current those antennas (interconnect cables) receive will flow into your 
equipment.

Sometimes you can modify equipment to correct the Pin One Problem, but 
usually the better fix is simply make the cables a lousy RX antenna by 
adding a common mode choke to them. That's what you're doing when you 
wind some turns of the cable through a ferrite cores.

Study the tutorial to understand this. And when I say study I mean 
STUDY, don't just read it through once.

73, Jim Brown K9YC


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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-21 Thread Fred Jensen
On 10/20/2011 8:24 PM, Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:
 I wholeheartedly endorse Don's comments.

I do too.

 A good practice with any antenna installation is to check the SWR on each
 band for which it is used, and make a note of that.

While in Comm Officers' School at Keesler AFB many years ago, I was 
active in the radio club [K5TYP].  We had a tribander up about 40 feet 
or so that never worked.  We borrowed some test equipment and measured 
the impedance on 20, 15, and 10, and it was almost exactly 50 ohms [and 
the same on all bands which should have been a clue].  After several 
weekends of work including several trips up the tower, one of the guys 
said, Let's do this one more time, and cranked the frequency of the 
impedance bridge down to 20m again.  Nothing changed.  The bridge saw 50 
ohms at 14 MHz, 15 MHz, 18 MHz [which wasn't a ham band then], ... 
everywhere else, including 80m.  We finally figured out we had the 
longest 50 ohm dummy load in Harrison County.

I'm not real clear on how faulty coax could cause his RFI symptoms, 
unless maybe none of the power is actually getting to the antenna and is 
backing up [a technical plumbing term] into the shack.  That it 
started with the propane tank episode is certainly suspicious.  OT's may 
remember the old adage, Note carefully from which corner of the chassis 
the smoke comes, that's where you want to begin troubleshooting.

73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2012 Cal QSO Party 6-7 Oct 2012
- www.cqp.org
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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-21 Thread Ian White GM3SEK

As Jim Brown says: if all these problems came on suddenly, focus on what 
parts of the installation have CHANGED.

You may well have identified one:


Right now I am thinking that I have a bad coax line outside of the 
house.  The reason for this is that I had a new propane tank installed 
and they needed to back the truck up and had to drive over the buried 
coax.  I did put boards down to spread out the load and protect the 
lawn and also the coax.  However the problem has started since this 
incident.

I pulled the coax out of the ground and it has bend marks at the edges 
where the boards were which to means that it was deformed and maybe it 
is now crushed.


Is there any chance that the shield has been pulled apart, and is now 
completely open-circuit? A broken shield connection can be a major cause 
of RFI, as RF currents can appear in very odd places in their search for 
a new return path.

How would a TDR respond to a broken shield? Installation-dependent, I 
suppose...


-- 

73 from Ian GM3SEK
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek
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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-21 Thread Mel Farrer
Take a antenna analyzer and put it at the end of the coax.  Regardless of the 
reading, run your hand up and down the outside of the coax.  If the shield is 
open or bad, the readings will go all over the place.  


Mel




From: Ian White GM3SEK gm3...@ifwtech.co.uk
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 1:12 PM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big 
failure


As Jim Brown says: if all these problems came on suddenly, focus on what 
parts of the installation have CHANGED.

You may well have identified one:


Right now I am thinking that I have a bad coax line outside of the 
house.  The reason for this is that I had a new propane tank installed 
and they needed to back the truck up and had to drive over the buried 
coax.  I did put boards down to spread out the load and protect the 
lawn and also the coax.  However the problem has started since this 
incident.

I pulled the coax out of the ground and it has bend marks at the edges 
where the boards were which to means that it was deformed and maybe it 
is now crushed.


Is there any chance that the shield has been pulled apart, and is now 
completely open-circuit? A broken shield connection can be a major cause 
of RFI, as RF currents can appear in very odd places in their search for 
a new return path.

How would a TDR respond to a broken shield? Installation-dependent, I 
suppose...


-- 

73 from Ian GM3SEK
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek
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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-21 Thread Jim Brown
On 10/21/2011 1:12 PM, Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
 Is there any chance that the shield has been pulled apart, and is now
 completely open-circuit? A broken shield connection can be a major cause
 of RFI, as RF currents can appear in very odd places in their search for
 a new return path.

I also like the broken shield hypothesis, Ian.


 How would a TDR respond to a broken shield? Installation-dependent, I
 suppose..

It should.

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-21 Thread Wayne Burdick
Is this a helpful list, or what?

Wayne


On Oct 21, 2011, at 1:21 PM, Jim Brown wrote:

 On 10/21/2011 1:12 PM, Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
 Is there any chance that the shield has been pulled apart, and is now
 completely open-circuit? A broken shield connection can be a major  
 cause
 of RFI, as RF currents can appear in very odd places in their  
 search for
 a new return path.

 I also like the broken shield hypothesis, Ian.


 How would a TDR respond to a broken shield? Installation- 
 dependent, I
 suppose..

 It should.

 73, Jim K9YC



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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-20 Thread goldtr8
Dear Group,

I apparently have a bigger problem with RF in the shack and it has 
nothing to do with the loop.

I have been running a successful shack on the second floor of my house 
and as of Friday last week when I installed the loop I have had nothing 
but RF problems.  I thought on Saturday when I removed the ladder line 
from the shack and coiled it up in the tree far away from the shack that 
I would be ok and everything seemed to be ok.

Anyway long story short, now with only the dipole (alpha delta trapped 
dipole at 30 ft) connected in the shack I have terrible RF problems and 
it can occur even barefoot at 100w so I am not pointing to the amp as of 
yet.

I have dropped the antenna and checked that the coax is tight, checked 
to see if the coax is tight at the lighting arrestor, ran with and 
without the tuner connected.   I have rechecked the grounding that I 
have in the shack, which after more research is not adequate, and I will 
be addressing that this weekend.  However, I don't think that this will 
fix it.

Right now I am thinking that I have a bad coax line outside of the 
house.  The reason for this is that I had a new propane tank installed 
and they needed to back the truck up and had to drive over the buried 
coax.  I did put boards down to spread out the load and protect the lawn 
and also the coax.  However the problem has started since this incident.

I pulled the coax out of the ground and it has bend marks at the edges 
where the boards were which to means that it was deformed and maybe it 
is now crushed.

So other than doing a whole new ground setup with more ground rods 
outside and adding more chokes to the coax, I want to check out the coax 
that I have this weekend to determine if I have a crushed problem.  Is 
there a way I can check it out with my 259b or is it just replace it and 
see what happens.

Anyway, I am off the air until I get this sorted out.

Basically now I have to start over, and frankly speaking I am a bit 
overwhelmed right now so I just need a friendly group to lean on as I 
really am frustrated right now as my favorite pastime is now no longer 
possible due to some failure of some kind or another.

Thanks in advance for your understanding in a non-elecraft post, but 
this is the most friendly and knowledgeable group on the net that I 
belong to so please help me get my K3 back on the air.

Cheers
Don

~73
Don
KD8NNU


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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-20 Thread Don Wilhelm
Don,

You MFJ259B can help you locate the fault.  Look at the instructions for 
the 259B and in particular the Distance to Fault section.

Yes, crushed coax can cause severe discontinuities, including actual 
shorts in the coax - not unlikely for coax being run over by heavy 
equipment.

A shack on the second floor is always a problem for RF.  A ground wire 
to a ground rod (hopefully also connected to the utility entrance ground 
rod) will provide a good path for AC Mains faults, and may also provide 
*some* lightning protection, it will not serve well for an RF ground 
point.  The distance between the ground rod and the shack connection 
will have some reactance due to its length - if it is near a quarter 
wavelength, it will present a high impedance in the shack - to be 
effective, an RF Ground point should present a low impedance at the 
shack location.

This may ba a case where the only good solution is he use of 
counterpoise wires.  A quarter wavelength of wire on each frequency of 
interest will present a low RF impedance at the shack end and a high 
impedance at the far end of the wire.  You may have to resort to this 
1/4 wave wire as your best solution.  Some experimentation may be required.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 10/20/2011 9:21 PM, gold...@charter.net wrote:
 Dear Group,

 I apparently have a bigger problem with RF in the shack and it has
 nothing to do with the loop.

 I have been running a successful shack on the second floor of my house
 and as of Friday last week when I installed the loop I have had nothing
 but RF problems.  I thought on Saturday when I removed the ladder line
 from the shack and coiled it up in the tree far away from the shack that
 I would be ok and everything seemed to be ok.

 Anyway long story short, now with only the dipole (alpha delta trapped
 dipole at 30 ft) connected in the shack I have terrible RF problems and
 it can occur even barefoot at 100w so I am not pointing to the amp as of
 yet.

 I have dropped the antenna and checked that the coax is tight, checked
 to see if the coax is tight at the lighting arrestor, ran with and
 without the tuner connected.   I have rechecked the grounding that I
 have in the shack, which after more research is not adequate, and I will
 be addressing that this weekend.  However, I don't think that this will
 fix it.

 Right now I am thinking that I have a bad coax line outside of the
 house.  The reason for this is that I had a new propane tank installed
 and they needed to back the truck up and had to drive over the buried
 coax.  I did put boards down to spread out the load and protect the lawn
 and also the coax.  However the problem has started since this incident.

 I pulled the coax out of the ground and it has bend marks at the edges
 where the boards were which to means that it was deformed and maybe it
 is now crushed.

 So other than doing a whole new ground setup with more ground rods
 outside and adding more chokes to the coax, I want to check out the coax
 that I have this weekend to determine if I have a crushed problem.  Is
 there a way I can check it out with my 259b or is it just replace it and
 see what happens.

 Anyway, I am off the air until I get this sorted out.

 Basically now I have to start over, and frankly speaking I am a bit
 overwhelmed right now so I just need a friendly group to lean on as I
 really am frustrated right now as my favorite pastime is now no longer
 possible due to some failure of some kind or another.

 Thanks in advance for your understanding in a non-elecraft post, but
 this is the most friendly and knowledgeable group on the net that I
 belong to so please help me get my K3 back on the air.


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Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big failure

2011-10-20 Thread Ron D'Eau Claire
I wholeheartedly endorse Don's comments. 

A good practice with any antenna installation is to check the SWR on each
band for which it is used, and make a note of that. That can help determine
whether an antenna problem is responsible for any sudden changes in behavior
by simply rechecking the SWR. Alternatively (and more accurate) you can use
your antenna analyzer and note the impedance at the feed point. If you live
in an area with lots of moisture and snow, a check in mid-summer and another
in mid-winter is useful. Significant differences can occur with a normally
functioning antenna from winter to summer. 

The 1/4 wave wires Don mentions can be in the shack. In similar situations
I've run them along the baseboard in the shack, sometimes out under the door
and down a hallway. Just be aware that the far end of that wire may have
significant RF voltage present while transmitting. If you run several, you
can run them in parallel for much of their length, then separate each one
for the last several feet so its end is away from the longer 'radials'. 

Good luck. Isn't messing about with antennas fun? (And this is supposed to
be done in mid-winter, don'cha' know? You get more RF mojo from fixing up
the antenna in a snowstorm than on a nice summer day.)

73,

Ron AC7AC


-Original Message-
From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net
[mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Don Wilhelm
Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2011 7:28 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Now General RF Issue WAS 160m loop experiment a big
failure

Don,

You MFJ259B can help you locate the fault.  Look at the instructions for 
the 259B and in particular the Distance to Fault section.

Yes, crushed coax can cause severe discontinuities, including actual 
shorts in the coax - not unlikely for coax being run over by heavy 
equipment.

A shack on the second floor is always a problem for RF.  A ground wire 
to a ground rod (hopefully also connected to the utility entrance ground 
rod) will provide a good path for AC Mains faults, and may also provide 
*some* lightning protection, it will not serve well for an RF ground 
point.  The distance between the ground rod and the shack connection 
will have some reactance due to its length - if it is near a quarter 
wavelength, it will present a high impedance in the shack - to be 
effective, an RF Ground point should present a low impedance at the 
shack location.

This may ba a case where the only good solution is he use of 
counterpoise wires.  A quarter wavelength of wire on each frequency of 
interest will present a low RF impedance at the shack end and a high 
impedance at the far end of the wire.  You may have to resort to this 
1/4 wave wire as your best solution.  Some experimentation may be required.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 10/20/2011 9:21 PM, gold...@charter.net wrote:
 Dear Group,

 I apparently have a bigger problem with RF in the shack and it has
 nothing to do with the loop.

 I have been running a successful shack on the second floor of my house
 and as of Friday last week when I installed the loop I have had nothing
 but RF problems.  I thought on Saturday when I removed the ladder line
 from the shack and coiled it up in the tree far away from the shack that
 I would be ok and everything seemed to be ok.

 Anyway long story short, now with only the dipole (alpha delta trapped
 dipole at 30 ft) connected in the shack I have terrible RF problems and
 it can occur even barefoot at 100w so I am not pointing to the amp as of
 yet.

 I have dropped the antenna and checked that the coax is tight, checked
 to see if the coax is tight at the lighting arrestor, ran with and
 without the tuner connected.   I have rechecked the grounding that I
 have in the shack, which after more research is not adequate, and I will
 be addressing that this weekend.  However, I don't think that this will
 fix it.

 Right now I am thinking that I have a bad coax line outside of the
 house.  The reason for this is that I had a new propane tank installed
 and they needed to back the truck up and had to drive over the buried
 coax.  I did put boards down to spread out the load and protect the lawn
 and also the coax.  However the problem has started since this incident.

 I pulled the coax out of the ground and it has bend marks at the edges
 where the boards were which to means that it was deformed and maybe it
 is now crushed.

 So other than doing a whole new ground setup with more ground rods
 outside and adding more chokes to the coax, I want to check out the coax
 that I have this weekend to determine if I have a crushed problem.  Is
 there a way I can check it out with my 259b or is it just replace it and
 see what happens.

 Anyway, I am off the air until I get this sorted out.

 Basically now I have to start over, and frankly speaking I am a bit
 overwhelmed right now so I just need a friendly group to lean on as I
 really am frustrated right now as my favorite pastime is now