Monday, 30 September 2013

80 Meter antenna considerations for UK Contesting

80 Meter antenna considerations for UK Contests

When I was first licensed I was anxious to get on as many bands as I could, as quickly as possible. Then, as is still often the case today, most operators turned to the G5RV antenna. To be fair it is an excellent starting antenna and can be made to “work” on most bands. By “Work” I mean it can be tuned with an ATU to show 50 ohms to the radio but that does not necessarily mean it is works well.




As with most multi-band antenna, the G5RV is a compromise. You get to work lots of bands but it is also a noisy antenna that requires a robust ATU to work. Sometimes the tuner built into many modern rigs will not cope very with it on all bands.




Noise is the perennial enemy of the amateur radio operator and, as I have already mentioned, the G5RV has a reputation of being a noisy antenna. This is for two reasons;
  1. It is a non-resonant antenna, especially on 80 meters, and
  2. It has an element of vertical polarisation in it.
Non-resonant antenna do not discriminate between the signal you do want and the noise that you don't want. As such they will quite happily receive that weak amateur signal in the 80 meter band that you are looking for but it will also pick up lots of interference from other bands and domestic QRN without favour. A resonant antenna however acts, not quite like a band pass filter, but it does positively discriminate towards the signals that it is tuned to receive. The benefits here are obvious and when you compare the difference between the signal that you do want and the noise level when using a G5RV and a resonant dipole you are likely to find an improvement of about 2 “S” points when on the later.




Vertical antenna are renowned for working DX but in the modern domestic environment they are also plagued by QRN from just about every electrical source in the home. I recently used a resonant half wave vertical antenna during the Club Field Day and got some excellent results from it while in the electrically quite environment of the field in Surfleet but, at home, it is virtually unusable due to the S7 noise level it hears from surrounding properties. The G5RV antenna has an element of vertical polarisation in it especially on 80 meters when part of the ribbon feeder is used as the antenna. Horizontally polarised dipoles are less prone to domestic QRN than vertical antennas.




When working search and pounce in a Contest it is also beneficial to have an antenna that has a reasonable usable bandwidth so that the tuner does not have too much work to do when searching the whole band for contacts. Unfortunately the best antenna for bandwidth is the Doublet fed with open wire feeder, followed by the full size dipole fed with coax cable. On 80 meters both of these are quite a formidable length. Also there is the fact that for a dipole to work most efficiently it must be at least half a wavelength above ground level and horizontal. Not many of us can manage that with our pocket handkerchief gardens!




Fortunately we can improve matters a little. I have been working on making some 40 meter traps so that I can make an 80/40 meter trap dipole. This gives me the advantage of having an antenna that is resonant on two bands and also, the traps serve to shorten the overall length of the antenna to somewhere close to that of a full size G5RV. There is a down side as the bandwidth is reduced but if you cut and tune your antenna to the relevant part of the band, the ATU in a modern transceiver should be able to cope with it. I use an LDG AT100Pro2 Autotuner and that manages very well indeed. Before the Contest I “train” the ATU by tuning every 15 k/c's or so and the settings are stored in its memory for rapid recall later.




For the inter-G contacts that we require during UK contesting we do not really need a good DX antenna with a low angle of radiation. In fact what we require is an antenna with a radiation pattern that is virtually straight up and down and here lack of height is a distinct advantage. A half wave trap dipole with a centre support of only 10 meters and the ends sloping down to about 2 meters has the type of radiation pattern that we are looking for. Not so good for DX but excellent for more local work.




The traps I make use the calculations from the VE6YP programme available at; http://www.qsl.net/ve6yp/
but instead of making them up on the commonly used drainpipe former, I just loosely wrap the coax length into a coil as per the idea by W6NBC in an article in QST magazine available here; http://w6nbc.com/articles/2011-02QSTtraps.pdf This has the advantage of easier to make and waterproof and slightly improved bandwidth.




When tuning the length of the antenna do so to the CW end of the band which is about 3 feet longer than the phone section. You then simply fold back the ends and cable tie them closely to the rest of the wire until it is resonant in the phone section. When the phone Contest is over you then simply un-clip the ends and you are back on the CW part of the band again.




The resulting antenna that I have fitted into my bungalow garden works very well for UK AFC, Sprint and CC contesting I hope that this information encourages some of you to improve your antenna system for 80 meters without breaking the Bank or moving to a house with a bigger garden. I also hope that it encourages you to help your Club by adding a few points during Contests.




73 de Jim G0HGH
SDARS
FISTS and AGCW




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