Hi Stefan
Yes. I can completely remove the cable for the motor at the antenna. It uses a connector
But then I wouldn't be able to retract it quickly (or remotely) in case of storm
I would have to access the top terrace and plug the motor cable
The other option is to disconnect the motor cable from the antenna controller down on the shack. So, easier to reconnect
The cable should be left "floating" whith any HV picked or I can even connect it to a gas discharge tube to GND
I keep transmitting WSPR + Opera + QRSS10 every 15 minutes
So far got reports from stations located North, but EA1FBU can't see my signal being NW and no reports from Italy at NE either
The loop is not completely horizontal. It is about 4m higer in the north, than in the sides and south. May be it affects the radiation
pattern a bit. But there are (still) not so many monitors with good Rx to confirm this
Hi Luis,
BTW. Those 24kV at 800 W can explain some pictures shown in this reflector ;-)
I know someone who has up to 45 kV rms on his LF antenna...
Will test it at low power first and see what happens. Think I can measure induced voltage on motor coils and this will show the risk of increasing power
Can't you remove the cable of the motor so it is floating at high potential too?
I'm still in the process of getting access to the fire extiguish pipe to clamp a wire up to
the antenna. It is not easy, but can be done
That sounds fine!
73, Stefan