... ROCKS ! I've got this 70 ft high oak tree in the back yard and have always used it for wires, but have struggled getting up past the 40 or 45 ft mark. Well, I finally got smart, went out and bought a new fishing rod, and after a couple of tries using my "Wrist Rocket" (sling shot), I slung a nut/bolt/washers over the TOP of the tree with ease. YEAH ! THAT's what I'm talking about !!
I then pulled up some nylon cord, and followed that with a twisted pair of #20 wire, soldered together at the end (was either that or #14 house wire). The wire slopes down to the basement window, then in, through an antenna tuner, then to the radio. First off, it looks awesome. It starts at 2 ft above ground and slopes up at about 45 degrees into the sky (okay, about 70ft). Secondly, it works better! I think the antenna tuner is a big part of the equation which optimizes the antenna for each band I'm listening to. On the AM BCB, now during the day I've got semi-local 1540khz WTKM at S9+30db on my Yaesu FT-767gx. With what was my best antenna, a 55ft piece of hardline hung in a pine tree, it was S9 at best. Last night, signals above 1500khz (the lowest my tuner will go right now) were S9+40db. Unreal. Tuning around last night amonst all the static crashes I heard (tentatively) La Voz del Napo (new for me), 3279.55khz, from Equador at about S9 (crashes to 30db over S9). R. Mauritanie on 4845khz was an incredible S9+40db. CFRX, 6070khz, is S9 in the daytime. Higher up, I'm not sure how it's working yet, but I'm hearing R. Hungary at sign on, 1700z, 15,335khz and I was working Japan and Australia on 20m CW ham band last night with better luck than my dipole. Will do some further testing and A/B comparisons, but so far, this aerial is a winner. All the mosquito bites were worth it! 73, John Wilke K9RZZ Milwaukee ---[Start Commercial]--------------------- World Radio TV Handbook 2004 is out! Only $20.97 through us. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0823059685/hardcoredxcom ---[End Commercial]----------------------- ________________________________________ Hard-Core-DX mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://dallas.hard-core-dx.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx http://www.hard-core-dx.com/ _______________________________________________ THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License published by Michael Stutz at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt