finally built my first dipole from scratch — few questions on the feed point
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that SWR spread is pretty normal for an inverted V, the angle of the legs affects the feed impedance and you're not going to get a perfectly flat curve across the whole band without a tuner or some ma
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nice work getting it up. i did almost the exact same thing for my first antenna except i used some kind of mystery wire i bought at a hamfest and spent way too long trying to figure out why it kept ch
so i've been putting this off for like two years and finally just did it last weekend. cut a 40m dipole out of some 14 AWG stranded wire i had laying around in the garage, used a SO-239 chassis connector i pulled off an old project as the center insulator — well, i basically just drilled two holes through a chunk of PVC pipe i had and ran the wires through, soldered to the connector pins. its not pretty but it works.
anyway hung it inverted-V style from a tree in the backyard, about 35 feet at the apex. got it trimmed to resonate right around 7.150 and the SWR is sitting around 1.4:1 at the low end and creeps up to about 2.1:1 toward 7.300. fed with about 50 feet of RG-8X into the shack.
my question is about the feed point situation — i just tied off the coax with some electrical tape to keep the strain off the connector but im a little worried about water getting in there over time. what do people usually use to weatherproof that center section? i've heard self-amalgamating tape is the way to go but also heard people use coax seal or just silicone. also wondering if my SWR curve is normal for an inverted-V or if i should keep trimming.
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