Perhaps your solution might be a sloper, using the radial bed, instead of another INV-L? I used to have an INV-L at the edge of a salt marsh in Connecticut, with 1/2 the radials on the marsh & the rest on the bog beside it. I use a pneumatic spud gun with fishing reel (see it on my QRZ page) to shoot the line up & over the trees & then pull the wire up from where the spud lands with an egg insulator & Dacron rope at the end. As an amputee there's really no practical way I can get out there now and shift the radial bed in the marsh and bog, there's trees and scrub brush everywhere.
Thanks to storms & hurricanes, some of the tallest trees I used at first have come down. I have had to now shoot at an angle to reach the highest remaining trees, making what I have now, a sloper. It usually does quite well and I use the 160M wire, 129' long, for 10M, 12M and the upper part of 15M with great success. My Triband on the roof picks up much too much RFI from local interference to use so I don't use it. All of my antennas are wire and are connected to this one radial plate. 73, Gary KA1J > Hi folks:Iam in the process to reinstall an inverted L antenna. Due to > the category 5 hurricane that passthru the island of ST.CROIX usvi i > loss 2 towers and antennas.one of the towers use to support and > inverted L antenna for 160 with radials all over the tower. I will > reinstall the inverted L on a different location about 25 or 30 feet > away from the original location.my question is could i use the same > radials from the previous location just running one wire attach to the > radial system to the new inverted Lground section? ThanksKP2BH/Jimmy > _________________ Topband Reflector Archives - > http://www.contesting.com/_topband _________________ Topband Reflector Archives - http://www.contesting.com/_topband