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These are some of my favorites. Two of them aren't very popular among hot sauce snobs; the Texas Pete's and the El Yucateco Black Label. That's ok; I really like the smoky flavor of the Black Label on hamburgers and hot dogs among other things. As for the Texas Pete's, a lot of fans of Louisiana...
Nope. DX range has very little to do with output power in the first place, and plus or minus 20 percent will make no discernible difference. The main things that small increase in power will do are make the finals get hot faster, and make the finals more susceptible to damage if your antenna or...
No, I'm not focusing on materials alone; I'm focusing on resistive loss which is affected by both material and diameter. I was attempting to point out that if a thinner conductor were better, commercial hardline would use thin conductors and commercial antennas would use thin elements, yet they...
Interesting that you've never seen anyone else use that logic.
Ever notice how in hardline, the feedline used in commercial installations, the center conductor is made of either copper tubing or (in less expensive hardline) aluminum tubing with a copper plating? Ever notice how antenna wire is...
Without going and digging into my ARRL and RSGB radio handbooks and other books by Doug Demaw and others, I'm going on the concept that DC resistance is loss, and more DC resistance equals more loss. Stainless steel has greater DC resistance than copper, and because of skin effect a large...
That's true of shortened antennas. If a short antenna has a high "Q", it has low DC resistance. DC resistance does increase the bandwidth; consider the bandwidth of a dummy load.
But a full length 1/4 wave antenna is not a shortened antenna and does not have a coil.
There are loaded whips that...
Great for 6 Meters, too. They also sell 5 foot sticks, which wouldn't even need trimming for 6. And the 10' stick is resonant on 12M without trimming. If you need to add length to one, just pick up some 6 gauge solid copper wire and a couple of hose clamps. There's no current at that end anyway.
I wouldn't use a 102" whip for competition. I would go to the nearest plumbing/building supply store and get a 10 foot stick of hard copper pipe, at least 1/2" diameter. Then mount it and cut it to best resonance. They are readily available up to 1-1/4" diameter; a 10' stick of that is close to...
I have both, and I like both of them. But I prefer the Lincoln for a couple of reasons, the most important (for me) being that it shows the frequency even in channel mode. The Quad 6 is either/or.
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