Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread W0MU Mike Fatchett
We had great luck from V47 in the 80's with a dipole at 45ft.  100 would 
have been fantastic.  You will most likely need a receiving antenna like 
a beverage.  It will make all the difference in the world.


Mike W0MU

On 6/10/2014 4:15 PM, Clive GM3POI wrote:

Hi Dale,
My only main point is that whatever antenna you end up using and with the
height you have available you the most important task will lie with the
operator. Without someone who can handle the pileups (even on 160m) and know
when to listen to other than local stations, you may well not give the
opportunity its deserves, justice.
  But I hope it all goes well and this is all in the planning apart from the
actual antenna. Remember all antennas work. 73 Clive GM3POI

-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of DALE LONG
Sent: 10 June 2014 18:58
To: Milt -- N5IA; topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

Hi Milt:

This is not a big dxpedtion like VP6DX!  We do not have a dxpedition
webpage. We will use LOTW but we will not have real-time logging.

For many years I have been involved in mission work to build radio stations
in Haiti with an organization called Radio Lumiere.   This is a Haitian
nationally-run organization (a good thing not often enough found in
developing countries where too often funding decisions are made by large
NGOs).

We have engineers and technical folks from USA and Germany who provide
technical assistance and radio equipment. About once a year we go to Haiti
and build a new FM station with 100ft tower.  This year our project is to
build an AM station.  The two amateur groups are tasked with erecting the
240 foot AM tower.  Then we get to play with it. This is a great
opportunity, and is not often offered to amateurs. The tower would be
erected by the group who is going in November for CQWW.  The 160m dxpedition
should arrive to find a big tower, but lacking radials with some kind of
160m antenna.  Improving it for 160m would be our project.   Our 160m
efforts will be not of much practical use for the radio network, but
necessary for topband.

It is interesting to note (for some of the AM broadcast engineers in this
group)  that the people in Haiti (who dont have television and online news)
still find AM to be an important communication vehicle.

We do have a big opportunity.  Many broadcast engineers do not have a high
opinion of amateur radio operators and their abilities.  And they do not
often offer to allow an amateur group the use of their broadcast tower.  But
in this case the amateur community is providing the tower and the expertise
to put it up.  In return, we are allowed to use it.  We plan to raise the
tower in late November and have a small team to operate in the CQWW.  I and
other amateurs plan to stay and operate the ARRL 160m contest.  We have a
decent place to stay near the airport, and not far to the site.  We will
have a generator to ensure that we have power.

The location is a salt marsh right on the ocean.  We own the 9-acre plot.
  Although I have used beverages in other dxpeditions, I think that beverages
would be of little value in the marshy area.  (when I last visited the site
the tower base and tuning house were on dry land and historically stay dry.)
  But part of the radial field would be in the marsh.  We would have some
local workers to provide assistance with radial installation.

What we will have available is simply a tall broadcast tower.  It will be
top-loaded to bring it close to the design frequency of 660 Khz. We are
still seeking a bottom insulator for the broadcast tower.

As far as 160m operation is concerned, we could tune the tower with
broadcast tuning network, but I agree with Dado and others that it may not
be as good as a sloping dipole. (If we have opportunity we will try both.)

If you would like to join us you would be most welcome.  We need some 160
guys, especially to build some kind of listening antenna for a site with
high ground conductivity.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S. in addition to topband activities, I would note that all the ham radio
stations in Haiti are operating with low or compromised antennas.  On the
higher bands we should be able to contact areas of the world that do not
often have opportunity to contact Haiti.  And as it happens many of our
first group are well-known VHF contesters. So you may find us on 6m when our
work is finished.






From: Milt -- N5IA 
To: DALE LONG 
Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 11:28 AM
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition


Dale,

Do you have a web page of the DXpedition that spells out the basics?

Interested.   In particular, what are your plans for 160 Meters, my
specialty?

de Milt, N5IA  --  XZ1N, XZ0A, VP6DX



-Original Message-
From: DALE LONG
Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 6:25 AM
To: Dragoslav Balaban ; 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com ; Topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topban

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread Hardy Landskov
Just an FYI to all on the reflector. I use a corner fed (~25 ft up from the 
corner) Delta Loop on 160 and am very happy with it.  Apex is at 130 ft. I 
eventually had to make it with #10 copper wire as even #12 would break in 
the 70 mph winds we get here. A 0.25 wl of 75 ohm coax is used as a matching 
section.
There is very tight coupling to the 150 ft tower it's hung on which gives it 
a fairly omnidirectional pattern according to EZNEC. My only complaint is 
the 2:1 bandwidth is 35 KHz. I should fab a tuner one of these days.
The bottom is 8 ft above ground so I can drive my pickup under it with no 
problem.
I work everything I call and don't miss the radials and the yearly repairs 
one bit! HiHi

73 Hardy N7RT


- Original Message - 
From: 

To: 
Cc: ; ; 


Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 4:05 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition


The advantages of Vertical polarization under these circumstances is a 
given, but don't overlook the class of antennas that Sevick classified as 
"SCV" A "Self Contained Vertical" can be as simple as a corner-fed Delta 
loop, or a "Double L"  Using the tower as a high support for a loop sounds 
easier than installing a radial field.  NCJ did a three-part series a few 
years back. I guess a lot depends upon the guarantee of future access ? 
N2KW


-- Original Message --
From: "Clive GM3POI" 
To: "'DALE LONG'" , "'Milt -- N5IA'" 
, 

Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
Date: Tue, 10 Jun 2014 22:15:06 -

Hi Dale,
My only main point is that whatever antenna you end up using and with the
height you have available you the most important task will lie with the
operator. Without someone who can handle the pileups (even on 160m) and 
know

when to listen to other than local stations, you may well not give the
opportunity its deserves, justice.
But I hope it all goes well and this is all in the planning apart from the
actual antenna. Remember all antennas work. 73 Clive GM3POI

-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of DALE 
LONG

Sent: 10 June 2014 18:58
To: Milt -- N5IA; topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

Hi Milt:

This is not a big dxpedtion like VP6DX!  We do not have a dxpedition
webpage. We will use LOTW but we will not have real-time logging.

For many years I have been involved in mission work to build radio 
stations

in Haiti with an organization called Radio Lumiere.   This is a Haitian
nationally-run organization (a good thing not often enough found in
developing countries where too often funding decisions are made by large
NGOs).

We have engineers and technical folks from USA and Germany who provide
technical assistance and radio equipment. About once a year we go to Haiti
and build a new FM station with 100ft tower.  This year our project is to
build an AM station.  The two amateur groups are tasked with erecting the
240 foot AM tower.  Then we get to play with it. This is a great
opportunity, and is not often offered to amateurs. The tower would be
erected by the group who is going in November for CQWW.  The 160m 
dxpedition

should arrive to find a big tower, but lacking radials with some kind of
160m antenna.  Improving it for 160m would be our project.   Our 160m
efforts will be not of much practical use for the radio network, but
necessary for topband.

It is interesting to note (for some of the AM broadcast engineers in this
group)  that the people in Haiti (who dont have television and online 
news)

still find AM to be an important communication vehicle.

We do have a big opportunity.  Many broadcast engineers do not have a high
opinion of amateur radio operators and their abilities.  And they do not
often offer to allow an amateur group the use of their broadcast tower. 
But
in this case the amateur community is providing the tower and the 
expertise

to put it up.  In return, we are allowed to use it.  We plan to raise the
tower in late November and have a small team to operate in the CQWW.  I 
and

other amateurs plan to stay and operate the ARRL 160m contest.  We have a
decent place to stay near the airport, and not far to the site.  We will
have a generator to ensure that we have power.

The location is a salt marsh right on the ocean.  We own the 9-acre plot.
Although I have used beverages in other dxpeditions, I think that 
beverages
would be of little value in the marshy area.  (when I last visited the 
site
the tower base and tuning house were on dry land and historically stay 
dry.)

But part of the radial field would be in the marsh.  We would have some
local workers to provide assistance with radial installation.

What we will have available is simply a tall broadcast tower.  It will be
top-loaded to bring it close to the design frequency of 660 Khz. We are
still seeking a bottom insulator for the broadcast tower.

As far as 160m operation is concerned, we could tune the 

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread n...@juno.com
The advantages of Vertical polarization under these circumstances is a given, 
but don't overlook the class of antennas that Sevick classified as "SCV" A 
"Self Contained Vertical" can be as simple as a corner-fed Delta loop, or a 
"Double L"  Using the tower as a high support for a loop sounds easier than 
installing a radial field.  NCJ did a three-part series a few years back. I 
guess a lot depends upon the guarantee of future access ? N2KW

-- Original Message --
From: "Clive GM3POI" 
To: "'DALE LONG'" , "'Milt -- N5IA'" 
, 
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
Date: Tue, 10 Jun 2014 22:15:06 -

Hi Dale,
My only main point is that whatever antenna you end up using and with the
height you have available you the most important task will lie with the
operator. Without someone who can handle the pileups (even on 160m) and know
when to listen to other than local stations, you may well not give the
opportunity its deserves, justice.
 But I hope it all goes well and this is all in the planning apart from the
actual antenna. Remember all antennas work. 73 Clive GM3POI 

-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of DALE LONG
Sent: 10 June 2014 18:58
To: Milt -- N5IA; topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

Hi Milt:

This is not a big dxpedtion like VP6DX!  We do not have a dxpedition
webpage. We will use LOTW but we will not have real-time logging.

For many years I have been involved in mission work to build radio stations
in Haiti with an organization called Radio Lumiere.   This is a Haitian
nationally-run organization (a good thing not often enough found in
developing countries where too often funding decisions are made by large
NGOs).  

We have engineers and technical folks from USA and Germany who provide
technical assistance and radio equipment. About once a year we go to Haiti
and build a new FM station with 100ft tower.  This year our project is to
build an AM station.  The two amateur groups are tasked with erecting the
240 foot AM tower.  Then we get to play with it. This is a great
opportunity, and is not often offered to amateurs. The tower would be
erected by the group who is going in November for CQWW.  The 160m dxpedition
should arrive to find a big tower, but lacking radials with some kind of
160m antenna.  Improving it for 160m would be our project.   Our 160m
efforts will be not of much practical use for the radio network, but
necessary for topband.  

It is interesting to note (for some of the AM broadcast engineers in this
group)  that the people in Haiti (who dont have television and online news)
still find AM to be an important communication vehicle.

We do have a big opportunity.  Many broadcast engineers do not have a high
opinion of amateur radio operators and their abilities.  And they do not
often offer to allow an amateur group the use of their broadcast tower.  But
in this case the amateur community is providing the tower and the expertise
to put it up.  In return, we are allowed to use it.  We plan to raise the
tower in late November and have a small team to operate in the CQWW.  I and
other amateurs plan to stay and operate the ARRL 160m contest.  We have a
decent place to stay near the airport, and not far to the site.  We will
have a generator to ensure that we have power.

The location is a salt marsh right on the ocean.  We own the 9-acre plot.
 Although I have used beverages in other dxpeditions, I think that beverages
would be of little value in the marshy area.  (when I last visited the site
the tower base and tuning house were on dry land and historically stay dry.)
 But part of the radial field would be in the marsh.  We would have some
local workers to provide assistance with radial installation.

What we will have available is simply a tall broadcast tower.  It will be
top-loaded to bring it close to the design frequency of 660 Khz. We are
still seeking a bottom insulator for the broadcast tower.

As far as 160m operation is concerned, we could tune the tower with
broadcast tuning network, but I agree with Dado and others that it may not
be as good as a sloping dipole. (If we have opportunity we will try both.)

If you would like to join us you would be most welcome.  We need some 160
guys, especially to build some kind of listening antenna for a site with
high ground conductivity.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S. in addition to topband activities, I would note that all the ham radio
stations in Haiti are operating with low or compromised antennas.  On the
higher bands we should be able to contact areas of the world that do not
often have opportunity to contact Haiti.  And as it happens many of our
first group are well-known VHF contesters. So you may find us on 6m when our
work is finished.




>
> From: Milt -- N5IA 
>To: DALE LONG  
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 11:28 AM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread Clive GM3POI
Hi Dale,
My only main point is that whatever antenna you end up using and with the
height you have available you the most important task will lie with the
operator. Without someone who can handle the pileups (even on 160m) and know
when to listen to other than local stations, you may well not give the
opportunity its deserves, justice.
 But I hope it all goes well and this is all in the planning apart from the
actual antenna. Remember all antennas work. 73 Clive GM3POI 

-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of DALE LONG
Sent: 10 June 2014 18:58
To: Milt -- N5IA; topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

Hi Milt:

This is not a big dxpedtion like VP6DX!  We do not have a dxpedition
webpage. We will use LOTW but we will not have real-time logging.

For many years I have been involved in mission work to build radio stations
in Haiti with an organization called Radio Lumiere.   This is a Haitian
nationally-run organization (a good thing not often enough found in
developing countries where too often funding decisions are made by large
NGOs).  

We have engineers and technical folks from USA and Germany who provide
technical assistance and radio equipment. About once a year we go to Haiti
and build a new FM station with 100ft tower.  This year our project is to
build an AM station.  The two amateur groups are tasked with erecting the
240 foot AM tower.  Then we get to play with it. This is a great
opportunity, and is not often offered to amateurs. The tower would be
erected by the group who is going in November for CQWW.  The 160m dxpedition
should arrive to find a big tower, but lacking radials with some kind of
160m antenna.  Improving it for 160m would be our project.   Our 160m
efforts will be not of much practical use for the radio network, but
necessary for topband.  

It is interesting to note (for some of the AM broadcast engineers in this
group)  that the people in Haiti (who dont have television and online news)
still find AM to be an important communication vehicle.

We do have a big opportunity.  Many broadcast engineers do not have a high
opinion of amateur radio operators and their abilities.  And they do not
often offer to allow an amateur group the use of their broadcast tower.  But
in this case the amateur community is providing the tower and the expertise
to put it up.  In return, we are allowed to use it.  We plan to raise the
tower in late November and have a small team to operate in the CQWW.  I and
other amateurs plan to stay and operate the ARRL 160m contest.  We have a
decent place to stay near the airport, and not far to the site.  We will
have a generator to ensure that we have power.

The location is a salt marsh right on the ocean.  We own the 9-acre plot.
 Although I have used beverages in other dxpeditions, I think that beverages
would be of little value in the marshy area.  (when I last visited the site
the tower base and tuning house were on dry land and historically stay dry.)
 But part of the radial field would be in the marsh.  We would have some
local workers to provide assistance with radial installation.

What we will have available is simply a tall broadcast tower.  It will be
top-loaded to bring it close to the design frequency of 660 Khz. We are
still seeking a bottom insulator for the broadcast tower.

As far as 160m operation is concerned, we could tune the tower with
broadcast tuning network, but I agree with Dado and others that it may not
be as good as a sloping dipole. (If we have opportunity we will try both.)

If you would like to join us you would be most welcome.  We need some 160
guys, especially to build some kind of listening antenna for a site with
high ground conductivity.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S. in addition to topband activities, I would note that all the ham radio
stations in Haiti are operating with low or compromised antennas.  On the
higher bands we should be able to contact areas of the world that do not
often have opportunity to contact Haiti.  And as it happens many of our
first group are well-known VHF contesters. So you may find us on 6m when our
work is finished.




>
> From: Milt -- N5IA 
>To: DALE LONG  
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 11:28 AM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
> 
>
>Dale,
>
>Do you have a web page of the DXpedition that spells out the basics?
>
>Interested.   In particular, what are your plans for 160 Meters, my 
>specialty?
>
>de Milt, N5IA  --  XZ1N, XZ0A, VP6DX
>
>
>
>-Original Message- 
>From: DALE LONG
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 6:25 AM
>To: Dragoslav Balaban ; 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com ; Topband@contesting.com
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>Hi Dado:
>
>I agree with you.  Thanks to advice from AA1K, I built a sloping dipole at 
>200 feet for 80m in HH7-land.  I was really loud into EU and USA with only
a 
>borrowed TS-50.
>
>We

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread Mike Furrey
I put a delta loop fed at a corner with the apex at only 100' (slightly 
squashed). We compared it to an inverted V that was on another tower about 200' 
away that was also 100'. A/B indicated the delta was louder on transmit but 
much noisier on receive. The Inverted V was quieter. Signals were down a bit 
but noise was down more. Just could have been issue at our QTH.
 
73, Mike WA5POK 


On Tuesday, June 10, 2014 2:58 PM, DALE LONG  wrote:
  


Hi Milt:

This is not a big dxpedtion like VP6DX!  We do not have a dxpedition webpage. 
We will use LOTW but we will not have real-time logging.

For many years I have been involved in mission work to build radio stations in 
Haiti with an organization called Radio Lumiere.   This is a Haitian 
nationally-run organization (a good thing not often enough found in developing 
countries where too often funding decisions are made by large NGOs).  

We have engineers and technical folks from USA and Germany who provide 
technical assistance and radio equipment. About once a year we go to Haiti and 
build a new FM station with 100ft tower.  This year our project is to build an 
AM station.  The two amateur groups are tasked with erecting the 240 foot AM 
tower.  Then we get to play with it. This is a great opportunity, and is not 
often offered to amateurs. The tower would be erected by the group who is going 
in November for CQWW.  The 160m dxpedition should arrive to find a big tower, 
but lacking radials with some kind of 160m antenna.  Improving it for 160m 
would be our project.   Our 160m efforts will be not of much practical use for 
the radio network, but necessary for topband.  

It is interesting to note (for some of the AM broadcast engineers in this 
group)  that the people in Haiti (who dont have television and online news) 
still find AM to be an important communication vehicle.

We do have a big opportunity.  Many broadcast engineers do not have a high 
opinion of amateur radio operators and their abilities.  And they do not often 
offer to allow an amateur group the use of their broadcast tower.  But in this 
case the amateur community is providing the tower and the expertise to put it 
up.  In return, we are allowed to use it.  We plan to raise the tower in late 
November and have a small team to operate in the CQWW.  I and other amateurs 
plan to stay and operate the ARRL 160m contest.  We have a decent place to stay 
near the airport, and not far to the site.  We will have a generator to ensure 
that we have power.

The location is a salt marsh right on the ocean.  We own the 9-acre plot.  
Although I have used beverages in other dxpeditions, I think that beverages 
would be of little value in the marshy area.  (when I last visited the site the 
tower base and tuning house were on dry land and historically stay dry.)  But 
part of the radial field would be in the marsh.  We would have some local 
workers to provide assistance with radial installation.

What we will have available is simply a tall broadcast tower.  It will be 
top-loaded to bring it close to the design frequency of 660 Khz. We are still 
seeking a bottom insulator for the broadcast tower.

As far as 160m operation is concerned, we could tune the tower with broadcast 
tuning network, but I agree with Dado and others that it may not be as good as 
a sloping dipole. (If we have opportunity we will try both.)

If you would like to join us you would be most welcome.  We need some 160 guys, 
especially to build some kind of listening antenna for a site with high ground 
conductivity.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S. in addition to topband activities, I would note that all the ham radio 
stations in Haiti are operating with low or compromised antennas.  On the 
higher bands we should be able to contact areas of the world that do not often 
have opportunity to contact Haiti.  And as it happens many of our first group 
are well-known VHF contesters. So you may find us on 6m when our work is 
finished.




>
> From: Milt -- N5IA 
>To: DALE LONG  
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 11:28 AM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
> 
>
>Dale,
>
>Do you have a web page of the DXpedition that spells out the basics?
>
>Interested.   In particular, what are your plans for 160 Meters, my 
>specialty?
>
>de Milt, N5IA  --  XZ1N, XZ0A, VP6DX
>
>
>
>-Original Message- 
>From: DALE LONG
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 6:25 AM
>To: Dragoslav Balaban ; 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com ; Topband@contesting.com
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>Hi Dado:
>
>I agree with you.  Thanks to advice from AA1K, I built a sloping dipole at 
>200 feet for 80m in HH7-land.  I was really loud into EU and USA with only a 
>borrowed TS-50.
>
>We are still looking for operators for the HH2 160m dxpedition Dec1-Dec8.
>
>73
>
>Dale - N3BNA
>
>
>
>
>-
>No virus found in this message.
>Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
>Version: 2014.0.4592 / Virus Database: 3955/

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread DALE LONG
Hi Milt:

This is not a big dxpedtion like VP6DX!  We do not have a dxpedition webpage. 
We will use LOTW but we will not have real-time logging.

For many years I have been involved in mission work to build radio stations in 
Haiti with an organization called Radio Lumiere.   This is a Haitian 
nationally-run organization (a good thing not often enough found in developing 
countries where too often funding decisions are made by large NGOs).  

We have engineers and technical folks from USA and Germany who provide 
technical assistance and radio equipment. About once a year we go to Haiti and 
build a new FM station with 100ft tower.  This year our project is to build an 
AM station.  The two amateur groups are tasked with erecting the 240 foot AM 
tower.  Then we get to play with it. This is a great opportunity, and is not 
often offered to amateurs. The tower would be erected by the group who is going 
in November for CQWW.  The 160m dxpedition should arrive to find a big tower, 
but lacking radials with some kind of 160m antenna.  Improving it for 160m 
would be our project.   Our 160m efforts will be not of much practical use for 
the radio network, but necessary for topband.  

It is interesting to note (for some of the AM broadcast engineers in this 
group)  that the people in Haiti (who dont have television and online news) 
still find AM to be an important communication vehicle.

We do have a big opportunity.  Many broadcast engineers do not have a high 
opinion of amateur radio operators and their abilities.  And they do not often 
offer to allow an amateur group the use of their broadcast tower.  But in this 
case the amateur community is providing the tower and the expertise to put it 
up.  In return, we are allowed to use it.  We plan to raise the tower in late 
November and have a small team to operate in the CQWW.  I and other amateurs 
plan to stay and operate the ARRL 160m contest.  We have a decent place to stay 
near the airport, and not far to the site.  We will have a generator to ensure 
that we have power.

The location is a salt marsh right on the ocean.  We own the 9-acre plot.  
Although I have used beverages in other dxpeditions, I think that beverages 
would be of little value in the marshy area.  (when I last visited the site the 
tower base and tuning house were on dry land and historically stay dry.)  But 
part of the radial field would be in the marsh.  We would have some local 
workers to provide assistance with radial installation.

What we will have available is simply a tall broadcast tower.  It will be 
top-loaded to bring it close to the design frequency of 660 Khz. We are still 
seeking a bottom insulator for the broadcast tower.

As far as 160m operation is concerned, we could tune the tower with broadcast 
tuning network, but I agree with Dado and others that it may not be as good as 
a sloping dipole. (If we have opportunity we will try both.)

If you would like to join us you would be most welcome.  We need some 160 guys, 
especially to build some kind of listening antenna for a site with high ground 
conductivity.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S. in addition to topband activities, I would note that all the ham radio 
stations in Haiti are operating with low or compromised antennas.  On the 
higher bands we should be able to contact areas of the world that do not often 
have opportunity to contact Haiti.  And as it happens many of our first group 
are well-known VHF contesters. So you may find us on 6m when our work is 
finished.




>
> From: Milt -- N5IA 
>To: DALE LONG  
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 11:28 AM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
> 
>
>Dale,
>
>Do you have a web page of the DXpedition that spells out the basics?
>
>Interested.   In particular, what are your plans for 160 Meters, my 
>specialty?
>
>de Milt, N5IA  --  XZ1N, XZ0A, VP6DX
>
>
>
>-Original Message- 
>From: DALE LONG
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 6:25 AM
>To: Dragoslav Balaban ; 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com ; Topband@contesting.com
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>Hi Dado:
>
>I agree with you.  Thanks to advice from AA1K, I built a sloping dipole at 
>200 feet for 80m in HH7-land.  I was really loud into EU and USA with only a 
>borrowed TS-50.
>
>We are still looking for operators for the HH2 160m dxpedition Dec1-Dec8.
>
>73
>
>Dale - N3BNA
>
>
>
>
>-
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Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread Herb Schoenbohm
A Delta Loop is probably the least noisy of anything you can hang off an 
AM tower.  I tired both slopers and a Delta Loop here (corner fed) and 
there and the noise was significantly lower on the Delta Loop for weak 
signal reception.  The Delta Loop here had a slight total slope to it to 
try and minimize inter-coupling to a 300 foot insulated AM tower.




Herb, KV4FZ




On 6/10/2014 12:17 PM, Mike Furrey wrote:

I would hang a delta loop off of that tower very easy to tune and match with a 
1/4 wave length 75 ohm coax. You don't have to worry about complex matching 
systems or ground. BUT it is noisy on receive.
73, Mike WA5POK


On Tuesday, June 10, 2014 9:25 AM, DALE LONG  wrote:
   



Hi Dado:

I agree with you.  Thanks to advice from AA1K, I built a sloping dipole at 200 
feet for 80m in HH7-land.  I was really loud into EU and USA with only a 
borrowed TS-50.

We are still looking for operators for the HH2 160m dxpedition Dec1-Dec8.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S.  I am forever sad about the time that I tried a sloping dipole on 160m 
from HH7.  It was the last day of my trip.  We finished the antenna after dusk 
and put it up.  It was my chance to be loud on 160 and make many people happy 
(I even had an argument that i should not do this because it was in a remote 
area and we had to fly at 6:30 AM).  So it was Friday night and I tuned around 
1812 and there I heard SSB signals..then all the band was full of SSB signals. 
W1 stations working W2 stations and W3 stations working W4 stations.  I could 
not break the pileups.  I could not get any answers to my CQ calls.  My one 
night to be on 160 with good antenna was lost because of the SSB contest!




From: Dragoslav Balaban 
To: 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 7:02 AM
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition


hi all,

As I can can see in EZNEC, simple model, Tower 2 Ft over average ground, 242
Ft high,
best and simplest solution is to put sloping Dipole, K8UR style, Arch shape,

>from top of the Tower,

Gain in dipole direction can be as much as 3.84 dBi at 17 degrees Vertical
angle,

one Dipole toward EU 60-90 degrees,  and  maybe other to west 270-300
degrees,

that would cover all 360 degrees , with F-S 90 degrees  less then 3 dB
difference, but 90 degrees from HH north is NA, south SA, and thats
close-almost local,  so should be no problem...

73 gl,looking forward HH , would be new one 160m hi

dado E74AW



-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Carl
Sent: Wednesday, 26 February, 2014 01:44
To: g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

Make them shorter and they will often do well over tidal marshes but not
over open water.

For a 240' tower Id suggest gamma feeding it up at the 1/4 wave point and
use 4 elevated radials. It the AM BCB radials are installed they will make
an excellent ground screen but do not connect them to the 160M feedline.

Carl
KM1H


- Original Message -
From: "Charlie Cunningham" 
To: ; 
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 5:24 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition



That's not so surprising Gary !!  te Way the Beverages and similar
slow-wave
antennas work is that they depend on the lossy GND  underneath for their
operation, so a salt marsh would not be a very beneficial GND structure
under a Beverage!

73,
Charlie, K4OTV

-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Gary
Smith
Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 5:09 PM
To: Topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

My Inv-L is on a salt marsh on Long Island Sound in Connecticut & I
ran two bidirectional 860' beverages over the salt marsh. I had
terrible results with the beverages, very noisy and hardly any
improvement over the Inv-L, much of the time the Inv-L was more
effective on Rx. With that, my experience of beverages & salt marshes
says to avoid this route.

I ended up with a HI-Z Triangular array for Rx and it works very well
at the same location.

Gary
KA1J


No, I don't believe 240' is too high - especially if the tower has a base
insulator!  It would be so close to 1/2 wave on 160, that it could be fed
very well as a 1/2 wave radiator on 160, either via a parallel tuned tank

or

a 1/4 wave of perhaps 450 oh ladder line. A 1/2 wave radiator wis an
excellent transmit antenna, and, because of the high feed-point impedance
can be driven against a very modest ground arrangement

Like you, though, I believe they would do well to put up some terminated
loops, or perhaps a Beverage (or 3?) for receive antennas! A 240'
vertical
would, I think,  be a VERY noisy receive antenna. If they put up a KAZ
terminated loop that only requires one overhead support, they could steer

it

around with ropes and weights on the ground. The KAZ is like ON4UN's

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread Mike Furrey
I would hang a delta loop off of that tower very easy to tune and match with a 
1/4 wave length 75 ohm coax. You don't have to worry about complex matching 
systems or ground. BUT it is noisy on receive.
73, Mike WA5POK 


On Tuesday, June 10, 2014 9:25 AM, DALE LONG  wrote:
  


Hi Dado:

I agree with you.  Thanks to advice from AA1K, I built a sloping dipole at 200 
feet for 80m in HH7-land.  I was really loud into EU and USA with only a 
borrowed TS-50.

We are still looking for operators for the HH2 160m dxpedition Dec1-Dec8.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S.  I am forever sad about the time that I tried a sloping dipole on 160m 
from HH7.  It was the last day of my trip.  We finished the antenna after dusk 
and put it up.  It was my chance to be loud on 160 and make many people happy 
(I even had an argument that i should not do this because it was in a remote 
area and we had to fly at 6:30 AM).  So it was Friday night and I tuned around 
1812 and there I heard SSB signals..then all the band was full of SSB signals. 
W1 stations working W2 stations and W3 stations working W4 stations.  I could 
not break the pileups.  I could not get any answers to my CQ calls.  My one 
night to be on 160 with good antenna was lost because of the SSB contest!


>
> From: Dragoslav Balaban 
>To: 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com 
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 7:02 AM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
> 
>
>hi all,
>
>As I can can see in EZNEC, simple model, Tower 2 Ft over average ground, 242
>Ft high, 
>best and simplest solution is to put sloping Dipole, K8UR style, Arch shape,
>from top of the Tower, 
>
>Gain in dipole direction can be as much as 3.84 dBi at 17 degrees Vertical
>angle, 
>
>one Dipole toward EU 60-90 degrees,  and  maybe other to west 270-300
>degrees,
>
>that would cover all 360 degrees , with F-S 90 degrees  less then 3 dB
>difference, but 90 degrees from HH north is NA, south SA, and thats
>close-almost local,  so should be no problem...
>
>73 gl,    looking forward HH , would be new one 160m hi
>
>dado E74AW
>
>
>
>-Original Message-
>From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Carl
>Sent: Wednesday, 26 February, 2014 01:44
>To: g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>Make them shorter and they will often do well over tidal marshes but not
>over open water.
>
>For a 240' tower Id suggest gamma feeding it up at the 1/4 wave point and
>use 4 elevated radials. It the AM BCB radials are installed they will make
>an excellent ground screen but do not connect them to the 160M feedline.
>
>Carl
>KM1H
>
>
>- Original Message -
>From: "Charlie Cunningham" 
>To: ; 
>Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 5:24 PM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>
>> That's not so surprising Gary !!  te Way the Beverages and similar 
>> slow-wave
>> antennas work is that they depend on the lossy GND  underneath for their
>> operation, so a salt marsh would not be a very beneficial GND structure
>> under a Beverage!
>>
>> 73,
>> Charlie, K4OTV
>>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Gary
>> Smith
>> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 5:09 PM
>> To: Topband@contesting.com
>> Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>>
>> My Inv-L is on a salt marsh on Long Island Sound in Connecticut & I
>> ran two bidirectional 860' beverages over the salt marsh. I had
>> terrible results with the beverages, very noisy and hardly any
>> improvement over the Inv-L, much of the time the Inv-L was more
>> effective on Rx. With that, my experience of beverages & salt marshes
>> says to avoid this route.
>>
>> I ended up with a HI-Z Triangular array for Rx and it works very well
>> at the same location.
>>
>> Gary
>> KA1J
>>
>>> No, I don't believe 240' is too high - especially if the tower has a base
>>> insulator!  It would be so close to 1/2 wave on 160, that it could be fed
>>> very well as a 1/2 wave radiator on 160, either via a parallel tuned tank
>> or
>>> a 1/4 wave of perhaps 450 oh ladder line. A 1/2 wave radiator wis an
>>> excellent transmit antenna, and, because of the high feed-point impedance
>>> can be driven against a very modest ground arrangement
>>>
>>> Like you, though, I believe they would do well to put up some terminated
>>> loops, or perhaps a Beverage (or 3?) for receive antennas! A 240' 
>>> vertical
>>> would, I think,  be a VERY noisy receive antenna. If they put up a KAZ
>>> terminated loop that only requires one overhead support, they could steer
>> it
>>> around with ropes and weights on the ground. The KAZ is like ON4UN's
>> FO0AAA
>>> 160 receive loop.
>>>
>>> 73,
>>> Charlie, K4OTV
>>>
>>> -Original Message-
>>> From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of 
>>> Richard
>>> Karlquist
>>> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 201

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread DALE LONG
Hi Dado:

I agree with you.  Thanks to advice from AA1K, I built a sloping dipole at 200 
feet for 80m in HH7-land.  I was really loud into EU and USA with only a 
borrowed TS-50.

We are still looking for operators for the HH2 160m dxpedition Dec1-Dec8.

73

Dale - N3BNA

P.S.  I am forever sad about the time that I tried a sloping dipole on 160m 
from HH7.  It was the last day of my trip.  We finished the antenna after dusk 
and put it up.  It was my chance to be loud on 160 and make many people happy 
(I even had an argument that i should not do this because it was in a remote 
area and we had to fly at 6:30 AM).  So it was Friday night and I tuned around 
1812 and there I heard SSB signals..then all the band was full of SSB signals. 
W1 stations working W2 stations and W3 stations working W4 stations.  I could 
not break the pileups.  I could not get any answers to my CQ calls.  My one 
night to be on 160 with good antenna was lost because of the SSB contest!


>
> From: Dragoslav Balaban 
>To: 'Carl' ; g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com 
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 7:02 AM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
> 
>
>hi all,
>
>As I can can see in EZNEC, simple model, Tower 2 Ft over average ground, 242
>Ft high, 
>best and simplest solution is to put sloping Dipole, K8UR style, Arch shape,
>from top of the Tower, 
>
>Gain in dipole direction can be as much as 3.84 dBi at 17 degrees Vertical
>angle, 
>
>one Dipole toward EU 60-90 degrees,  and  maybe other to west 270-300
>degrees,
>
>that would cover all 360 degrees , with F-S 90 degrees  less then 3 dB
>difference, but 90 degrees from HH north is NA, south SA, and thats
>close-almost local,  so should be no problem...
>
>73 gl,    looking forward HH , would be new one 160m hi
>
>dado E74AW
>
>
>
>-Original Message-
>From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Carl
>Sent: Wednesday, 26 February, 2014 01:44
>To: g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>Make them shorter and they will often do well over tidal marshes but not
>over open water.
>
>For a 240' tower Id suggest gamma feeding it up at the 1/4 wave point and
>use 4 elevated radials. It the AM BCB radials are installed they will make
>an excellent ground screen but do not connect them to the 160M feedline.
>
>Carl
>KM1H
>
>
>- Original Message -
>From: "Charlie Cunningham" 
>To: ; 
>Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 5:24 PM
>Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
>
>> That's not so surprising Gary !!  te Way the Beverages and similar 
>> slow-wave
>> antennas work is that they depend on the lossy GND  underneath for their
>> operation, so a salt marsh would not be a very beneficial GND structure
>> under a Beverage!
>>
>> 73,
>> Charlie, K4OTV
>>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Gary
>> Smith
>> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 5:09 PM
>> To: Topband@contesting.com
>> Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>>
>> My Inv-L is on a salt marsh on Long Island Sound in Connecticut & I
>> ran two bidirectional 860' beverages over the salt marsh. I had
>> terrible results with the beverages, very noisy and hardly any
>> improvement over the Inv-L, much of the time the Inv-L was more
>> effective on Rx. With that, my experience of beverages & salt marshes
>> says to avoid this route.
>>
>> I ended up with a HI-Z Triangular array for Rx and it works very well
>> at the same location.
>>
>> Gary
>> KA1J
>>
>>> No, I don't believe 240' is too high - especially if the tower has a base
>>> insulator!  It would be so close to 1/2 wave on 160, that it could be fed
>>> very well as a 1/2 wave radiator on 160, either via a parallel tuned tank
>> or
>>> a 1/4 wave of perhaps 450 oh ladder line. A 1/2 wave radiator wis an
>>> excellent transmit antenna, and, because of the high feed-point impedance
>>> can be driven against a very modest ground arrangement
>>>
>>> Like you, though, I believe they would do well to put up some terminated
>>> loops, or perhaps a Beverage (or 3?) for receive antennas! A 240' 
>>> vertical
>>> would, I think,  be a VERY noisy receive antenna. If they put up a KAZ
>>> terminated loop that only requires one overhead support, they could steer
>> it
>>> around with ropes and weights on the ground. The KAZ is like ON4UN's
>> FO0AAA
>>> 160 receive loop.
>>>
>>> 73,
>>> Charlie, K4OTV
>>>
>>> -Original Message-
>>> From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of 
>>> Richard
>>> Karlquist
>>> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 3:38 PM
>>> To: topband@contesting.com
>>> Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>>>
>>> Congratulations on your adventure.
>>>
>>> In the past, I have seen some of these AM tower efforts
>>> ruined by lousy receive conditions.  I suggest you
>>> get an ad

Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

2014-06-10 Thread Dragoslav Balaban
hi all,

As I can can see in EZNEC, simple model, Tower 2 Ft over average ground, 242
Ft high, 
best and simplest solution is to put sloping Dipole, K8UR style, Arch shape,
from top of the Tower, 

Gain in dipole direction can be as much as 3.84 dBi at 17 degrees Vertical
angle, 

one Dipole toward EU 60-90 degrees,  and  maybe other to west 270-300
degrees,

that would cover all 360 degrees , with F-S 90 degrees  less then 3 dB
difference, but 90 degrees from HH north is NA, south SA, and thats
close-almost local,  so should be no problem...

73 gl,looking forward HH , would be new one 160m hi

dado E74AW



-Original Message-
From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Carl
Sent: Wednesday, 26 February, 2014 01:44
To: g...@ka1j.com; Topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition

Make them shorter and they will often do well over tidal marshes but not
over open water.

For a 240' tower Id suggest gamma feeding it up at the 1/4 wave point and
use 4 elevated radials. It the AM BCB radials are installed they will make
an excellent ground screen but do not connect them to the 160M feedline.

Carl
KM1H


- Original Message -
From: "Charlie Cunningham" 
To: ; 
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 5:24 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition


> That's not so surprising Gary !!  te Way the Beverages and similar 
> slow-wave
> antennas work is that they depend on the lossy GND  underneath for their
> operation, so a salt marsh would not be a very beneficial GND structure
> under a Beverage!
>
> 73,
> Charlie, K4OTV
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Gary
> Smith
> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 5:09 PM
> To: Topband@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>
> My Inv-L is on a salt marsh on Long Island Sound in Connecticut & I
> ran two bidirectional 860' beverages over the salt marsh. I had
> terrible results with the beverages, very noisy and hardly any
> improvement over the Inv-L, much of the time the Inv-L was more
> effective on Rx. With that, my experience of beverages & salt marshes
> says to avoid this route.
>
> I ended up with a HI-Z Triangular array for Rx and it works very well
> at the same location.
>
> Gary
> KA1J
>
>> No, I don't believe 240' is too high - especially if the tower has a base
>> insulator!  It would be so close to 1/2 wave on 160, that it could be fed
>> very well as a 1/2 wave radiator on 160, either via a parallel tuned tank
> or
>> a 1/4 wave of perhaps 450 oh ladder line. A 1/2 wave radiator wis an
>> excellent transmit antenna, and, because of the high feed-point impedance
>> can be driven against a very modest ground arrangement
>>
>> Like you, though, I believe they would do well to put up some terminated
>> loops, or perhaps a Beverage (or 3?) for receive antennas! A 240' 
>> vertical
>> would, I think,  be a VERY noisy receive antenna. If they put up a KAZ
>> terminated loop that only requires one overhead support, they could steer
> it
>> around with ropes and weights on the ground. The KAZ is like ON4UN's
> FO0AAA
>> 160 receive loop.
>>
>> 73,
>> Charlie, K4OTV
>>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of 
>> Richard
>> Karlquist
>> Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 3:38 PM
>> To: topband@contesting.com
>> Subject: Re: Topband: AM broadcast tower and 160m dxpedition
>>
>> Congratulations on your adventure.
>>
>> In the past, I have seen some of these AM tower efforts
>> ruined by lousy receive conditions.  I suggest you
>> get an advance team out to the site to check
>> out the noise level etc. and maybe put up some
>> temporary beverages, loops, whatever and LISTEN
>> on them.  Use WWV and WWVH on 2.5 MHz as a beacon.
>>
>> Others can comment on whether 240 feet is too high.
>>
>> Rick N6RK
>> _
>> Topband Reflector Archives - http://www.contesting.com/_topband
>>
>> _
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>>
>
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