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400

Archive: https://archive.today/vDvNj

From the post:

>[My Ham Radio Journey] wanted to see if a “common person” (in his words) could build an effective vertical ham radio antenna. If you look at the video below, the answer is apparently yes. He started with a 24-foot fishing rod and a roll of 22 gauge wire. The height of the antenna wire is just over 20 feet long and he has several ground radials, as you might expect for a vertical antenna. You also need a toroid to make an unun for the feed point. The details of how he mounted everything will be useful if you want to experiment with making your own version.

Archive: https://archive.today/vDvNj From the post: >>[My Ham Radio Journey] wanted to see if a “common person” (in his words) could build an effective vertical ham radio antenna. If you look at the video below, the answer is apparently yes. He started with a 24-foot fishing rod and a roll of 22 gauge wire. The height of the antenna wire is just over 20 feet long and he has several ground radials, as you might expect for a vertical antenna. You also need a toroid to make an unun for the feed point. The details of how he mounted everything will be useful if you want to experiment with making your own version.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

You need some sort of arrestor to take care of that. Feeling the line directly into your receiver isn't a good thing.

[–] 1 pt

You'll need to show me what you mean and how it's done some day. I'm dumb about electrical stuff

[–] 0 pt

Something like this:

https://www.proxicast.com/shopping/antenna-accessories/lightning-arresters/#

They're basically gas filled devices, you get anything more than your normal signal levels (aka lightning) the gas inside ionizes and conducts like a neon sign.

[–] 1 pt

Huh, first time I've ever seen that. Most of the designs I've seen in ghetto ham sites shows a wire that has like a splice to a spike driven a few feet into the ground.

Not that it matters regardless. My little tecsun is broken and I can't afford a new radio, nor is there much to listen to in the US anymore, especially where I'm at