
www.dxers-unlimited.dxer.info

Dxers Unlimited weekend editions
by Prof. Arnaldo Coro Antich
radio amateur CO2KK
Radio Habana Cuba

Dxers Unlimited
Dxers Unlimited's mid weeek edition for 27-28 May 2003
By Arnie Coro
radio amateur CO2KK
Hi amigos radioaficionados around the world... Yes , we are now more
than two million people
worldwide holding valid amateur radio operators licenses,and the
number of us is expected to grow,
especially in third world nations. Amateur radio is one of the more
than 70 ways that you and I can
have a very good time enjoying the radio hobby amigos ... Item one:
Sporadic E skip season now in
really full swing .. Monday May 26th saw many single, double and even
triple hope E skip openings to
the enjoyment of TV and FM Band Dxers . 6 meter band radio amateur
operators also had a
fantastically busy day all along North America, the Caribbean, Mexico
and Central America, as the
band stayed open for almos 18 hours ! Even late in the evening my
local time here in Havana, I was
picking up several 6 meter band automatic beacon stations, that
indicated that the band was open ...
With the many new amateur HF transceivers now coming with the 6 meter
band included , it is very
interesting to see that many hams in North America and Europe are now
exploring 6 meters for the
first time... Sporadic E skip ,the most misterious of all known
ionospheric propagation modes is
capable of producing 60 dB over S 9 signals at distances of a thousand
miles or more while running
powers as low as 10 Watts... More about Sporadic E later in this mid
week edition of your favorite
listener oriented radio hobby program... Dxers Unlimited coming to you
from Radio Havana Cuba...
Item two: Antenna topics section today will be devoted to a very
interesting multi-band system that
may be installed even when space is at a premium. It makes use of a
technique that is now becoming
the de-facto standard for new AM broadcast station's transmitting
towers... Item three: Thunderstorm
season also in full swing, so be pretty sure that you have both your
antennas and your radios
disconnected when you finish operating... a lightining strike even a
couple of city blocks away from
your location may destroy your receiver... so follow your friend Arnie
Coro's advice and be really
sure that once you finish listening or transmitting if you are an
amateur radio operator, yes, be
really sure that both the antennas and the power plugs are
disconnected... Item four: A new ham
radio little fun rig , the SSW, my most recent brainchild... SSW
stands for the SIX SOCKETS
WONDER..., I'll be telling you more about this easy to build weekend
project later in today's
program.
Now stay tuned right on this same frequency or keep you connection to
our streaming audio from
www.radiohc.cu Margarita Delgado
is my sound engineer and producer ... I am Arnie Coro in Havana..
.....
This is Radio Havana Cuba, the name of the show you are listening to
is Dxers Unlimited, and here is
item two, our main feature for today...
Multi-band or totally broadband antennas are your only choice if you
happen to have space for just
one antenna system. The multi-band approach is followed by many radio
amateurs, because when
properly tuned, a multi-band antenna can be a really good performer .
Today I will tell you about a
rather unique multiband antenna , that uses a technique that has
become the de-facto standard for AM
broadcast stations antennas, both for new installations, and for
retro-fitting to already existing
systems... The multi-band sloping loaded vertical monopole...
the SLVM antenna, is very easy to build , and materials for making
yours can be found at any
hardware store. The SLVM or Sloping Loaded Vertical Monopole
prototype's main radiating element is
just 6.70 meters long, that's about 22 feet.
The main element is made using 450 ohm window ladder line if it is
available, and if not , you can
make a homebrew open wire line with the insulated spreaders keeping
the wires about 100 millimeters
or 4 inches from each other... By the way and this is very interesting,
the homebrew open wire line
provides more operating bandwidth than the factory made window line,
but of course, it will take
more time to make your SLVM if you have to homebrew the main element.
The SLVM main element has , as you may realize, two parallel wires,
and they are connected together
at one end.. You should actually solder them together at the top end
of the antenna. At the low end
of the antenna, one wire goes to the live side of an assymetric
antenna tuner, and the other wire
goes to ground and to the set of radials required by this antenna.
Now let't take a look at the shorted end of the antenna... there you
have to install a loading
coil... Don't worry , I will give you details of the coil in just a
moment... Then after the coil,
the SLVM uses a capacitive loading hat made from eight wires and a
spreader to keep them separated
from each other at one end...
The SLVM uses both inductive and capacitive loading amigos !!! And it
does require the use of at
least one quarter wave radial for each band , but four for each band
will be much better. Now , let
me give you the details for the loading coil...
it is wound using number 18 enamelled wire,that is a wire with a
diameter of dot 71 millimeters, the
coil is closewound, and the coil form is just a length of PVC pipe of
25 millimeters or one inch
diameter.You must wind 40 turns , tightly wound and then the coil must
be weatherproofed, something
that is done by using PVC electricians tape first and applying several
coats of high quality acrylic
paint...
Just for your information, two coils built using that weatherproofing
technology and exposed to our
Cuban tropical rainy weather and intense UV radiation, lasted for more
than seven years without any
signs of problems. As a matter of fact, I opened them up, just to see
how they had done, and was
very happy to see that the two windings of PVC electricians tape and
three coats of acrylic paint
had protected the coils so well that after seven years they were in
what could be described as "like
new conditions" .
The SLVM is very easy to install, and mine is sloping from one of the
towers into the backyard...
The loading wires are made from number 14 or no 12 copper wire, and
it's best to remove the plastic
insulation and use the bare copper wires.. You will need eight wires
... but they all won't be of
the same length... Sounds funny, but the fact is that you want the
wires to spread from a common
point, where they are soldered to the top end of the loading coil...so
they can not be of the same
length... Here is how I do it... I place the antenna flat on the drive
way, and then solder the coil
to the top end of the ladder line... Then I use a high impact
polyethilene square of about 100 by
100 millimeters, that's 4 by 4 inches... to which I attach the other
end of the loading coil... Well
actually, the coil is held in place to the polythilene square by two
plastic cable ties... Then at
the other end of the plastic square, I drill eight holes, one for each
of the capacity hat wires...
The are all soldered together and then via a flexible section of
coaxial cable braid, they are
connected to the loading coil...
Now, I spread the wires uniformly , at the other end, where they are
tied to the spreader... Your
best choice is to make the spreader from a section of UV resistant
CPVC water pipe, and then run a
wire horizontally along the spreader to which you must solder each of
the eight wires forming the
capacity hat... By the way , it this sounds a bit complicated, just
visit www.radiohc.cu and read
the script of the show... I use a CPVC pipe spreader that is one meter
long, just 3.28 feet in
length... The antenna is installed at a sloping angle between 20 and
45 degrees.
And the antenna tuner is , in my installation, just about one meter
above the backyard's soil...
held in place by a wooden post. From the antenna tuner to the station
I run a length of RG213 50 ohm
coaxial cable. The antenna tunes on the following bands.. 40, 30, 20,
17, 15, 12 and 10 meters...
and the only inconvenience is that the tuning up of the system is not
automated, so I have to go out
to the backyard and set the antenna tuner's controls for the center of
the band I want to
use.Normally I leave my SLVM tuned to the 30 meter band, one of my
favorite spots to enjoy amateur
radio CW Morse code radiotelegraphy two way contacts.... If you want
to learn more about the SLVM
Seven amateur Band low cost antenna, just drop me an e-mail to arnie@rhc.cu,
again, very easy to
remember, but write it down now... send mail to arnie@rhc.cu
, or VIA AIR MAIL, send a postcard to
Arnie Coro , Radio Havana Cuba, Havana, Cuba, and please specify that
you want the information about
the low cost easy to homebrew SLVM 7 band antenna system
.....
Si amigos, yes my friends, out mes amis... radio is a hobby you and I
enjoy in many different
ways... and the different seasons bring in different flavors of
radio.. Now, during the early and
mid summer, we have sporadic E skip, a propagation mode that adds many
new stations to TV Dxers
logbooks, and that FM broadcast band Dxers also enjoy a lot. 6 meter
band amateur radio operators
are able to work stations as far as three thousand miles away at
times, when more than one patch of
sporadic E ionization is available and double, or even triple hop
signals reach your radio... Be on
the lookout for sporadic E signals, the 27 megaHertz citizen band is a
very good indicator of
possible openings, when loud skip signals reach your CB radio !!!
Item four...The SSW, my latest fun vacuum tube project... actually it
was something that came almost
of nowhere... when I was organizing some electronic components ...
Suddenly I ended up with three
different types of quartz crystal sockets, and three different types
of sockets for vacuum tubes...
I decided to put the six of them atop a piece of breadboard, and wire
it up as crystal controlled
oscillator... The SIX SOCKETS WONDER was born !!! It can be used as a
quartz crystal tester,
frequency marker with a crystal of the approppriate frequency, it can
also be used as a secondary
frequency standard , by placing in one of the sockets a 10 megaHertz
crystal that is then trimmed to
the exact frequency. The SSW can also be used as a test injection
oscillator !!! AND OF COURSE, it
works as a pretty cute one tube transmitter. By placing a 6L6-G on the
octal socket, and feeding
just 200 volts to the plate , the SSW produces a nice QRP or low power
output of 2 Watts,with an
input power of 6 Watts, and that is about 30 percent overall
efficiency, exactly what to expect, by
the book, from a power oscillator connected directly to the antenna...
Three resistors, three fixed
and one variable capacitor and a homebrew coil wound on a small length
of PVC pipe completes this
little weekend project that I am now using quite frequently on the 30
meter ham band ... QRP of
course !!!
And now amigos as always at the end of the show here is Arnie Coro's
Dxers Unlimited's HF plus 6
meters propagation update and forecast... The sunspot effective number
SSN is now around 77, while
the K index was reaching one again a figure higher than 3 Tuesday
morning local time in Havana, so
obviously some kind of propagation disturbance was in progress , so
probably conditions at the time
you listen to the show are not going to be all that good amigos...
Meanwhile, there is a high
probability of more sporadic E events happening during the next six to
eight weeks, so keep a
constant watch for possible E skip signals on your TV... AND, don't
forget to send your signal
reports, QSL requests and radio hobby related questions to arnie@rhc.cu,
or VIA AIR MAIL to Arnie
Coro, Radio Havana Cuba, Havana, Cuba... see you all at the weekend
edition of Dxers Unlimited, next
Saturday and Sunday UTC days !!!