wpwx694
Member
Is tuning antenna better than using a tuner?
Yes.
The antenna tuner hides the mismatch from the radio.
Actually tuning the antenna will make it radiate more efficiently.
What exactly do you mean by "tuning antenna"?Is tuning antenna better than using a tuner?
Yep that and the iMax 2000 both work great on 10 meters.The Solarcon A99 antenna can very easily modified for use on 10m and it works very well. If you need an easy and effective base antenna it’s a good option.
He makes a really good point. Too many people get wrapped around the axle about SWR, when that isn't the end all be all of antennas. First thing to accept in your antenna brain is that every antenna is a compromise. Second thing to accept is that SWR isn't an indicator of how well an antenna is working. Personally, I prefer resonant antenna simply because they are easier to deal with, but that doesn't mean non-resonant antennas can't work well. All things being equal, I prefer an antenna that can be tuned to be resonant with a decent SWR without using a tuner. Simple is better in my experience. I'm an old military man and simple worked where other complications just created friction to my mission. But...circumstances dictate!Actually, if the antenna is resonant but has high SWR it won't make any difference. Resonance and SWR are two different things. An EFHW is resonant and radiates beautifully, but has a feedpoint impedance ~2,800 ohms.
It's pretty hard to get an acceptable match across 1.7 MHz of radio spectrum on 10 meters unless it's a low-Q antenna. I prefer to adjust an antenna for 10m to electrical resonance at the middle of your expected operating frequency range, then see what you got for SWR. If the SWR isn't right due to antenna design or the matching coil or transformer is off, and adjusting the feedline length can't "fix it", then use the tuner on it. Any "losses" at HF on 50 ohm coaxial cable is so low that it doesn't make a difference anyway.
Adjusting or "tuning" an antenna out of resonance to get a SWR match actually defeats the purpose of matching your antenna system to the radio output impedance.
Yep that and the iMax 2000 both work great on 10 meters.
Personally, I prefer resonant antenna simply because they are easier to deal with, but that doesn't mean non-resonant antennas can't work well.
Yep, all true. In fact using 10/11 meters local was my first goal. Still is in a way. But 11m seems really dead these days for local communcaiotns. Most of the stations out there seem to be "big gun" stations running lots of power and aiming for skip. But, who knows, maybe it will pick up again after the solar peak dies down.
And yes, "skip" is actually nothing but interference for people trying to do local communications on 10/11 meters. When the sun dies out so you can leave the squelch wide open on your CB base station without a bunch of noise coming out of it is when local communications are the best. Then you can actually hear a weak signal when somebody calls on it. So during the peak of the sunspot cycle you're not likely to hear too much local comms going on.
I couldn't agree more and why mine is still up even though I have other antennas.If you’re focus is primarily skip then the inverted V is actually darned good antenna. Cheap, wind resistant and easy to put up.
It can be tough talking to someone using a vertically polarized antenna when you have a horizontally polarized antenna, especially when you can talk to them easily when you both are using the same antenna polarization.
And it is local ground wave that I want to work since most others around me use a vertically polarized antenna. If it wasn't for that I would not worry about a vertical antenna for 10m. My inverted v dipole does just fine for everything else on 10m and 11m.Polarization doesn't matter once the signal bounces off the ionosphere. If you're interested in groundwave propagation vertical polarization is the only one that works. The attenuation on groundwave with horizontal polarization is so high it basically doesn't work. 10 meters is the highest frequency band where groundwave works, although it's not nearly as effective as say 160 meters. Groundwave propagation depends on RF currents flowing in earth to propagate over the horizon.
Vertical to horizontal, line-of-sight, will have 20dB of attentuation.