Hey Walt! I'm a retired electronics tech but never had time to study radio theory. Your pole mounted speaker wire antenna gives me the encouragement to go for my Technicians license. Simple is as simple does, and I like that. Thanks!
Thank you for demonstrating that antennas don’t have to be complex or expensive. When I was starting out fifty years ago, most of my initial antennas were built with Radio Shack speaker wire with direct coax connection. Some were even connected using alligator clips. They all worked to some extent and most worked pretty well.
I live in the desert and was looking for a portable way to mount my antenna. There's not always trees around. I love the beach umbrella anchor idea. Thank you!
I really appreciate all your videos. I've been a ham since 1983 but pretty inactive for a long time. I've forgotten most everything I ever knew and your videos are really helping me get up to speed on everything again.
Walt, you're a really, really great Elmer! Just a word to the folks that building your own antennas -- starting with a dipole or vertical -- is a wonderful way to get into the technical part of ham radio. Components are cheap and learning the theory by making your own is really empowering! But, to simplify the calculations for the feet and inches folks versus the meters crowd.. A vertical is length = 234/freq in MHz and a dipole is "twice that" or 468/freq in MHz. Another way to understand this is that a 40m dipole is approximately 66 feet so each side would be 33 feet. If you want an 80m dipole just double those dimensions or about 66 feet on one side and a 20m would be half that or about 16.5 feet on each side. Just to be safe, cut the length an extra six inches to a foot depending on the band and trim, measure, and prune.
I’ve been im a state of analysis paralysis trying to figure out the best antenna to put up at my house. But you’ve inspired me to just grab some wire and start experimenting. Thanks for the nudge to get up and start operating!
Walt this video is superb. I travel a lot for work, and traveled to Arizona about a week ago. I've operated radio here before, but at the time I relied exclusively on an EFHW wire with 9:1 UNUN that I ran into a tree. Arizona is famous for not having a whole lot of trees, so any radio I did was very planned and methodical. About two days before I flew out here I saw this video, and I quickly set about soldering up a 15 meter and 20 meter quarter wave with counterpoise, and threw them in my luggage. When I got to AZ this week I bought the biggest crappie pole I could find (13 feet). Today I drove out to a park, tuned up the pole, and activated a park local to me twice (UTC day shift) with both SSB and CW. The thing you don't mention is how incredibly wide banded this is! I spent a short time tuning, but ended up just being okay without having the dip in my band (the sun made the nano VNA hard to read, and I didn't have a measuring device with me), but even with the dip on my 15m antenna being slightly below the band edge, I still had 1.3:1 within the voice portion of 15 meters! I have 2-3 big weekends of park activations and general radio fun planned up thanks to this antenna set up. Thank you for all you do. KD5WCX
Thanks Walt. Another usful video and an antenna setup that I will try. I am already a 'speaker wire' convert and like you, I operate a G90. My antenna is just an EndFed random wire thrown into the trees at the back of the house feeding through a 49:1 balun. In the 2 months that I have been trialing it I have have made contacts into Australia, USA, Italy, Bulgeria and Austria. Not to bad from NZ on 20 watts, and in truth, I can see no reason for wanting or needing more watts. Keep your experiments, reviews and ideas coming Walt, you are inspiring a whole load of other hams out here and just showing us all what can be done.......damn the theory, just get out there and try it. Cheers Phil ZL2VTH
Per usual, your videos educate, excite, and please! Keep up the good work! F = 468/Fmhz for a half wave dipole total overall length. Verticals are, of course, 234/Fmhz. Also, if you use a fiberglass pole, _carefully_ bend the top over, stake the bottom to the ground out from the pole about six inches, you will have a bow effect that keeps the antenna taught without having to to tape it to the pole.
wow, those were the cleanest sounding CQ contest transmissions i’ve ever heard, usually on a contest all I hear is QRM bleeding over on everyone.. they must respect the 3k separation in France. Thx for the video and thanks for the antenna tool app tip.. that will come in handy (if I ever use a real antenna) LOL..
My very first antenna with my very first radio (the G90) was a 20m dipole into one of those binding posts. Worked a lot before I got given a G5RV JR. Now I use the 20m antenna for POTA
Great video Walt! Nice to see someone who has the same passion for building antennas that I also have. This video just shows that you don't need to spend hunders of bucks to have an effective antenna! Thanks for the video. KD9VAN
Hey Walt! I had all the stuff laying around and I decided to build one of these. I got it tuned, and used it with an X6100 and a battery for the massive 10w. In 2 hours I got 6 pota activations, and a guy in Canada. Not too bad considering all the other folks trying for the pota people. Not much salt water to take advantage of here in WI, but I am happy with the results. You are the man, and I am just a moron with a ham ticket. 73, KD9OCL
I have my General, but haven't got an HF rig yet, let alone an antenna. Now I have some ideas to try out for when I get one! Better yet, A great cheap portable option for camping, which is another goal. Thanks, and yes, I'm a subscriber.
Thank you. You should do one using speaker wire as a doublet, feed line to a 4:1. Check out the NorCal Doublet. It was one of my favorites in the early 90's when I'd play portable.
Thank you for your videos. I resisted doing much HF (issues with Municipality initially, but then) I got lots of bad advice. The "Right / Only way" was often lousy on performance and I hate the idea of spending high-hundreds to a thousand + dollars on an antenna. You've inspired me to screw around and find out. Currently on a cheap end-fed loosely hung from my tree on 100w and doing more and going further than I ever have. Thanks for the renewed inspiration. 73
Hey Walt. Good content as always. One of my first HF wire antennas was from speaker wire. I've since graduated to a Chameleon MPAS Lite, but my speaker wire antenna is always in my portable bag. Hope to put you in the log one day.
Hi Walt, They were some great contacts for such a simple antenna. That was a nice QSO you had with Callum this morning. There's proof the G90 can get out when paired with a decent antenna. Stay safe. 73 WJ3U
I built a dipole antenna for the 40m band a couple of months ago. I hung it about 9 meters high on an old telescope pole as an inverted "V." As luck would have it, I initially hit the correct lengths. Here in Europe the 40m band goes from 7.0 to 7.2MHz At dead center, 7.1MHz my SWR was 1.2:1. The bandwidth (SWR
Hey Walt. I made a speaker wire dipole for 2m. 1/2 wave antenna at 15ft. Hook to a old Motorola radio. The only I built it is because I have had several local hams tell me if wouldn’t work. So I built it just to prove a point. So come to find out it works awesome. Talking simplex 20miles fairly easy. Almost as good as my jpole at 35ft. Take care Walt K4YAG 73
👍All good advice, thanks. Have made a few antennas like this and they work. I found that I tended to have more repeatable results setting up pre-made 1/4 GP vertical antennas by raising the radials off the ground. I raised the bottom of the vertical element by 1 or 2 metres with the radial ends sloping down to insulated tent pegs.
Cheers Walt, great video we call those fishing poles Roach poles in the UK, using one at the moment sticking out of the balcony of my flat, cheap and cheerful dose the job for me.
Great video, and definitely inspiring!! I'll be getting my 891 soon but have already ordered/received my Coffee and Ham Radio Apollo EFHW, which I'm looking forward to building. And now I have another few projects after that one. All of these are perfect for the field type stuff that interests me, and even save me a few bucks that I can spend on an antenna analyzer, tuner, and miscellaneous adapters to make it all work together. Thanks as always!!
I'm about to set up my HF ham station and this video will help me tremendously as I was really looking for something cheap and portable as an antenna. Many thanks.
What a kickass low Cost Antenna Setup. Good job on that, UW. The foxtrott Contest was the Reason for me not to go portable DX and instead taking Bumble Bee out for a Ride. Happy Sunday into Poland. 73 de YFUG 💯🙋♂
General class, grid EN72jj. Rig is Yaesu FT840 into long wire Windom at 30feet. Recent ice storm here took down my antennas, waiting for weather to warm up to put them back up. Nice video...simple, easy and to the point. I use an MFJ 948 antenna tuner for various bands...73 OM
France and Wales from Arizona today on 15m with 85w and a vertical. Fun! just discoverd your channel after hearing you on Callums live stream today. 73 de KI7MJU
one can have a lot of fun and learn much with a spool of speaker wire. I had an end-fed ( with one of my homemade 9:1 UNUNs) up for almost a decade that was made with el-cheap-o stranded speaker wire - it was the really thin stuff ( prob. old Radio Shack stuff) too! it was around 60 feet on the element and the counterpoise was a ground stake and also my gutter and downspout . the thing worked better than I could believe ! , ( other one was a ladder line doublet) the end-fed was an inverted L config. so it had about 35' vertical and then flat across the top. it finally broke from an ice storm, so I simply built another ( better quality speaker wire this time) . stranded speaker wire works best , plus it's easy to hide in plain sight ( especially once it oxidizes a little bit. so I agree - if you are a new ham or a old goat like me, get out and experiment .
I read about these bnc to banana connectors based antenna in the pooular baofeng book as well. There they suggest to make a pyramid directional anntenna. I am yet to try though. Your approach looks much less effort though. Thanks Best 73
Built it testerday with a 1:1 balun from Ham Goodies and only 2 counterpoise wires, Tunes in with my Xeigu G90 on 80 -10 m bands easily with SWR at 1:1. Made a lot of QSO's accross the bands but sticking to mainly 40 and 20 as it works better than my juniot GR5V. Hoping to make more N America contacts with this low take-off job with 10w. Well pleased thanks. Doug MM7DSA
I wish you had a more clear picture of exactly how you connect or wind all the wires (antenna, ground) to the bnc before covering it up with tape. And wish you could show how you attach the balun too for us newbies.
Hi, I've been asked this before so I did this video to show more detail. Hopefully this will help!: ruclips.net/video/xEYp9IHqdIM/видео.htmlsi=J_nc2mUvYnLKOrEI
The red connector goes to the antenna wire, but what is the black one connected to? Is that just going to the ground jacketing of the coax cable going up to that connector, or is it even connected to anything? Maybe it's a silly question, but was a bit unclear here . . .
@@jimmieblue6262 no, you're confusing earth ground with RF ground. They are two different things. This antenna has no earth ground and doesn't require anything driven into the ground.
I found your channel and yes, you have inspired me to try making a vertical antenna. The Rybakof antenna is the one I have chosen to make. It's the end of November, and I hope to get it on the air December 2, and work 40, 20, 15, & 10 meters... Thanks for the tips, 73's de kd5smf
Hello! Great videos. Can you use a metal pole? Could you put the fiberglass pole on top of a metal pole? Meaning, "getting it way up there". My metal pole is sixteen feet long. What would you recommend i do? Would i run my coax to the bottom of the fiberglass pole that will be installed on top of the metal pole? Then, what about my ground wires? Or is this just a bad idea? Thanks so much for your time
Thanks! The metal pole is going to probably cause some issues. The upper element may couple to it and cause issues. You’re really not getting much from the 16 feet of height and you are probably better off just building it on the ground.
Thanks for another helpful video, Walt. Very useful info and the two you did on the Rybakov were especially so. I’ve copied your antenna drawings but don’t do Facebook. Are you no longer going to include these drawings in your YT vids? Thanks and 73.
Thanks a lot. I never thought to do this with new spiderbeam, but I'm getting on this by my campout this weekend. I needed a proper side project like this to take my mind off of the collection of hamsticks I've been dealing with hihi. love and respect
Hey thanks WALT you are a BIG guy. I mean that as a compliment! Not talking about your body, haha! I loved your Favorite Antennas video, it got me yearning, striving, and acting! I have only watched a third of this video but I wonder why you need three antennas with each covering two bands. A doublet fed with ladder line to balun and tuner gives many bands. Ok I will keep watching now, not meaning to criticize just wondering. Keep going and having fun and sharing! Thanks!
Excellent video Walt. Can i make one suggestion to simplify set up? You can secure top end of wire to pole with a simple hitch, and just wind twice or thrice around the length of the pole. No taping required. Makes set up and take down much quicker and easier. Keep up the great work! 73 M3KXZ
You make the most informative ham radio videos! Lots of poles and beach umbrella holders online. Which are the ones you ere using in the video? Thanks! Al
I realized that my QTH is just 360km from Slupsk in SM1 land, but I run mostly FT8. However I have built some antennas myself, so experimenting is good. Electric fence alu wire is actually pretty nice from a weight perspective, but it's quite stiff. The transit to copper is also suspect to electrochemical issues.
Thanks for this great idea and video. Just what I'm looking for when will be in Iceland end of June. Not many trees to put up a dipole or efhw. Does a carbon fiber pole effect the performance? 73 Hope to catch you on 10 m while you're over there.
Hello sir. Totally new Ham general here looking at the G90 for home and portable use. Want to build one of these at the house and a setup for portable. But being new I couldn’t tell. Is the speaker wire coming off the pole hooked to the red connector and the radials to the black? And then just a coax from the connector to the radio? What’s the part that you recommend but not required do? Thanks I’m advance. You saved my mind from going insane researching antennas!! 73 from Maryland. KC3VWP
Hi Wayne, yes the upper driven element to positive red and radials to black ground. Look for a 1:1 balun to use as a choke in the coax line, it keeps common mode energy from coming up the coax line and making the coax also act as part of the radiated antenna.
@@waynerichter3190 I actually use RG8X although RG58 will work as well. I usually by it premade with BNC ends. One thing I highly recommend is purchasing some BNC to SO-239 adapters if you are going to experiment and build different antennas and use different radios.
Stupid question. When trimming a antenna, what part of the frequency allocation do you try to cut at? The center? Example: build 20m EFHW for extra phone portion, would you cut to length for 14.250? Does it really matter as long as you’re within the allocation? Thank you!
I’ve found that as long as you are somewhat near the center of the portion you want to use, you’re fine. I cut my 20m antennas for 14.240 and work the entire phone portion. 73, Walt
I cut my wire antennas for phone and add a small female connector to the end. I have a variety of different length duplicate tails that I can plug in to give me resonance on the digi or cw portion of the band.
Good Day Walt. You could call this video; "How To Save $400 ! Of all the antenna videos that I have seen, this, is the most intelligent. Ham radio comments/instructions/how-to, etc. is like reading the bible. Thousands of pages of superfluous bunk with a little actual useful and understandable information. You are Excellent. I just found you today and subscribed. Thank You & Best Regards.
Yes I’ve worked the states from here on 20, 15 and 10 but I think my best contacts from here are my long path QSOs to Australia. I have 3 in the log from here to VK. I was pretty stoked when that happened.
yes speaker wire fabulous however be wary the wire breaks quite easily as i have experienced 1st hand i no longer use but admit i was really excited with the cheap price of the wire just do not pull on it too much great video thanks Walt
G’day Walt. Have you thought about using your other pole to create a reflector and make your vertical directional with a bit of gain. Like the video. Cheers
@@LanceVK6LK_AussieHam will do, I’ve actually been researching this and keep getting information that says a director is more efficient than a reflector when using only 2 elements. I’m thinking about trying to measure that as well.
Hello! I just ordered the 21’ pole did you remove the 2 very thin telescopic pieces from the top? Or just leave them? I’m afraid that I’ll break it! But I saw someone say that it was possible to remove some of the telescopic pieces by opening the end cap up. And do I need an antenna tuner for a 20 meter wire? Thank you!
I actually left the thin pieces and have actually taped wire to them (my Rybakov video). Yes you can take them out though the bottom when the pole is not extended.
...& u talking abt how easy it is to put up a vertical, makes me wanna go outside & make one, to make ANOTHER antenna (that I really don't need) but still wanna try, hi hi! 73 de WA4ELW in TN 🇺🇸 dit dit 😃
I got a similar idea while calling CQ at a POTA this morning. Mine will involve soldering and 3D printed parts though. Why keep it simple when you can overengineer it?
Hi Walt thanks for the video! I also have a question, if you were to place one of these antennas on a flatish roof and tied to a cement chiminey do you think the SWR would be acceptable and would it extend the DX distance?
If that flattish roof is metal I’m absolutely positive it will work wonders. I have a No Radial Vertical at my home QTH over a flat metal roof and it does really well. As for the chimney to be honest I’m not really sure but it’s worth a try to find out. I would definitely try it.
Hey Walt, this is very cool. Would this work if I hung the vertical element up in a tree and had it run down the trunk? Essentially using the main part of the tree as a "mast"? I've read that you can get RF issues if the wire is touching too much of the tree.
ur right, I wudn't want it too close to, or even near, a tree trunk; so since I really don't have the room for a ground-mounted vertical (as shown in the great video), I instead made a wire vertical & with a light rope, tossed it over a higher tree limb, with the lower, radiating end tied, or weighted down, near ground level at first (to be able to put it together!); then I attached what were to become elevated radials, making sure they'd be high enough off the ground to walk under; then I simply tied them off in different directions to various trees, using a bungee cord at the end of each radial AND over the high tree limb, so as to give the antenna & radials a bit of "wiggle room," to be better able to handle any storms &/or high winds that occasionally pass thru (& it works great)! GL de WA4ELW in TN 🇺🇸 dit dit 😃
I think it would work but you might have some issues, it depends on the size of the tree. As I always say "there's only one way to find out" give it a try!
If I wanted to, could I find a multiple holder so that I could have all three (or more) bands up and connected to the banana clip? I know that the RF would use the most resonate antenna, but would it have interfenence between the other masts?
Very good review, thank you. I am very new to radio and I have a couple questions. Can you use 3 or 4 different lengths of wire on a single pole and tie the ends together and make a single connection to the radio? Also, can you bury the ground plane wires a few inches under ground so the grass can be cut without removing them? Thank you in advance for any information you can pass along.
Hi Greg, yes you can use all three driven elements together but you will need some sort of spreader to space the wires apart. What you’re describing is done with a DX Commander antenna, take a look into that antenna. As for burying the counterpoise wires you really can’t let them go too deep. Some people use something similar to a staple to get the wires tight into the ground and the grass grows over them. The wires need to be just on the surface. Counterpoise wires are the RF ground to the antenna which is different than earth ground that’s driven into the ground. Think of a candle sitting on a mirror and the light reflecting, RF ground is similar, the wire on the ground is interacting with the vertical driven element wire. 73, Walt
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Thank you for the very quick reply and for the info. I will check out the recommendations you made. I am starting with just being a listener but eventually will seek my HAM license. Again, thanks for the help.
Walt, your explanation of a candle’s light reflecting off a mirror is so apt. Such a simple concept of RF but truly helpful for many I am sure. Still using the Rybakov. Gangbusters!
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Old welding rods that are no long good for use can be bent to make ground staples. I had a bad box of rods, 50 pounds should do it! Heavy wire cores should be long enough for two. Check with a welding shop.
Hi Walter! This video just popped up for me today and glad it did. Liked & subscribed. Great tips and fun video. Also went back and reviewed & liked a couple other videos - great content! 73, John - KK7JBZ
It’s great fun, messing with wires.🤪 Trying a 5/8 for 15m, as im a Mountain HAM that low angle of radiation should make great DX. Thanks for your great work 73 de HB3XBL 👍🇨🇭
Hey Walt! I'm a retired electronics tech but never had time to study radio theory. Your pole mounted speaker wire antenna gives me the encouragement to go for my Technicians license. Simple is as simple does, and I like that. Thanks!
It's so good that you are bursting the myth that antennas has to be expensive. Also, the simpler the better.
73
André thank you so much my friend!
Your enthusiasm for your Hobby is a great inspiration to us all. Thank You.
Thank you so much for the kind words Jimmy!
Great stuff!!!!! Thanks for taking the time to makes these vids!!!! Upstate NY here
Thanks so much for the kind words!
Thank you for demonstrating that antennas don’t have to be complex or expensive. When I was starting out fifty years ago, most of my initial antennas were built with Radio Shack speaker wire with direct coax connection. Some were even connected using alligator clips. They all worked to some extent and most worked pretty well.
I live in the desert and was looking for a portable way to mount my antenna. There's not always trees around. I love the beach umbrella anchor idea. Thank you!
They work great! 73
I really appreciate all your videos. I've been a ham since 1983 but pretty inactive for a long time. I've forgotten most everything I ever knew and your videos are really helping me get up to speed on everything again.
Thank you very much for watching! 73, Walt
Walt, you're a really, really great Elmer! Just a word to the folks that building your own antennas -- starting with a dipole or vertical -- is a wonderful way to get into the technical part of ham radio. Components are cheap and learning the theory by making your own is really empowering! But, to simplify the calculations for the feet and inches folks versus the meters crowd..
A vertical is length = 234/freq in MHz and a dipole is "twice that" or 468/freq in MHz. Another way to understand this is that a 40m dipole is approximately 66 feet so each side would be 33 feet. If you want an 80m dipole just double those dimensions or about 66 feet on one side and a 20m would be half that or about 16.5 feet on each side.
Just to be safe, cut the length an extra six inches to a foot depending on the band and trim, measure, and prune.
Great advice an info! Thanks for adding this in the comments. 73
I’ve been im a state of analysis paralysis trying to figure out the best antenna to put up at my house. But you’ve inspired me to just grab some wire and start experimenting. Thanks for the nudge to get up and start operating!
Have fun Andrew! 73 de K4OGO
Walt this video is superb. I travel a lot for work, and traveled to Arizona about a week ago. I've operated radio here before, but at the time I relied exclusively on an EFHW wire with 9:1 UNUN that I ran into a tree. Arizona is famous for not having a whole lot of trees, so any radio I did was very planned and methodical. About two days before I flew out here I saw this video, and I quickly set about soldering up a 15 meter and 20 meter quarter wave with counterpoise, and threw them in my luggage. When I got to AZ this week I bought the biggest crappie pole I could find (13 feet). Today I drove out to a park, tuned up the pole, and activated a park local to me twice (UTC day shift) with both SSB and CW. The thing you don't mention is how incredibly wide banded this is! I spent a short time tuning, but ended up just being okay without having the dip in my band (the sun made the nano VNA hard to read, and I didn't have a measuring device with me), but even with the dip on my 15m antenna being slightly below the band edge, I still had 1.3:1 within the voice portion of 15 meters! I have 2-3 big weekends of park activations and general radio fun planned up thanks to this antenna set up. Thank you for all you do.
KD5WCX
Thanks so much for the update and comment. That’s awesome! 73, Walt K4OGO
Thanks Walt. Another usful video and an antenna setup that I will try. I am already a 'speaker wire' convert and like you, I operate a G90. My antenna is just an EndFed random wire thrown into the trees at the back of the house feeding through a 49:1 balun. In the 2 months that I have been trialing it I have have made contacts into Australia, USA, Italy, Bulgeria and Austria. Not to bad from NZ on 20 watts, and in truth, I can see no reason for wanting or needing more watts. Keep your experiments, reviews and ideas coming Walt, you are inspiring a whole load of other hams out here and just showing us all what can be done.......damn the theory, just get out there and try it. Cheers Phil ZL2VTH
Thanks so much Phil! 73 my friend!
I like your style and presentation - easy and not complicated. Looking for more to come.
Thank you so much Lew!
Per usual, your videos educate, excite, and please! Keep up the good work!
F = 468/Fmhz for a half wave dipole total overall length. Verticals are, of course, 234/Fmhz.
Also, if you use a fiberglass pole, _carefully_ bend the top over, stake the bottom to the ground out from the pole about six inches, you will have a bow effect that keeps the antenna taught without having to to tape it to the pole.
Good info! Thanks!
wow, those were the cleanest sounding CQ contest transmissions i’ve ever heard, usually on a contest all I hear is QRM bleeding over on everyone.. they must respect the 3k separation in France. Thx for the video and thanks for the antenna tool app tip.. that will come in handy (if I ever use a real antenna) LOL..
Yes those were the ones I could use, as you can see the bands were packed! 73 my friend!
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES hey, that app is nice.. I’ll def use that one.. will save me a lot of “head scratching” time.. lol
My very first antenna with my very first radio (the G90) was a 20m dipole into one of those binding posts. Worked a lot before I got given a G5RV JR. Now I use the 20m antenna for POTA
Awesome!!!
You are a wealth of knowledge, appreciate you making things easier for us non-engineering Hams!
Thanks for the kind words! 73, Walt
Walt, your enthusiasm is infectious..after watching your videos I want to go play radio! 😁👍
Thanks Paul! I just love playing radio
Great video Walt! Nice to see someone who has the same passion for building antennas that I also have. This video just shows that you don't need to spend hunders of bucks to have an effective antenna! Thanks for the video. KD9VAN
Thanks my friend, it is indeed a passion!
Hey Walt, I just wanted to let you know how much I enjoy watching your videos. Thanks so much for doing what you do. You are awesome! 73 K2CMP
Oh wow, thank you so much for the kind words! You are awesome! 73 Walt K4OGO
Hey Walt! I had all the stuff laying around and I decided to build one of these. I got it tuned, and used it with an X6100 and a battery for the massive 10w. In 2 hours I got 6 pota activations, and a guy in Canada. Not too bad considering all the other folks trying for the pota people. Not much salt water to take advantage of here in WI, but I am happy with the results. You are the man, and I am just a moron with a ham ticket. 73, KD9OCL
Thanks so much! We are all just guys with ham tickets playing with wire my friend!
Fine work Walt. Nicely done and hope many newcomers make one if these.
Motters M7TRS 73 👍🏻
Thanks so much! 73 my friend
I have my General, but haven't got an HF rig yet, let alone an antenna. Now I have some ideas to try out for when I get one! Better yet, A great cheap portable option for camping, which is another goal. Thanks, and yes, I'm a subscriber.
Awesome Roger, I made this video for folks like you just getting into HF. This comment makes my day! 73 my friend
Thank you. You should do one using speaker wire as a doublet, feed line to a 4:1. Check out the NorCal Doublet. It was one of my favorites in the early 90's when I'd play portable.
Thanks Jason, I’ll look into that!
Thank you for your videos. I resisted doing much HF (issues with Municipality initially, but then) I got lots of bad advice. The "Right / Only way" was often lousy on performance and I hate the idea of spending high-hundreds to a thousand + dollars on an antenna. You've inspired me to screw around and find out. Currently on a cheap end-fed loosely hung from my tree on 100w and doing more and going further than I ever have. Thanks for the renewed inspiration. 73
Thank you so much for watching and for the kind words!
Wishing you great DX! 73, Walt
Hey Walt. Good content as always. One of my first HF wire antennas was from speaker wire. I've since graduated to a Chameleon MPAS Lite, but my speaker wire antenna is always in my portable bag. Hope to put you in the log one day.
Thanks for sharing! Hope to catch you on the bands soon!
I really enjoyed the video! Really interesting to see how you can communicate long distances using a simple setup.
Thanks for watching!
Hi Walt,
They were some great contacts for such a simple antenna. That was a nice QSO you had with Callum this morning. There's proof the G90 can get out when paired with a decent antenna. Stay safe. 73 WJ3U
Thanks Don! 73 my friend
Thanks!
Thank you for supporting the channel! 73, Walt
I built a dipole antenna for the 40m band a couple of months ago. I hung it about 9 meters high on an old telescope pole as an inverted "V." As luck would have it, I initially hit the correct lengths. Here in Europe the 40m band goes from 7.0 to 7.2MHz At dead center, 7.1MHz my SWR was 1.2:1. The bandwidth (SWR
Great stuff! Thanks for sharing.
Hey Walt. I made a speaker wire dipole for 2m. 1/2 wave antenna at 15ft. Hook to a old Motorola radio. The only I built it is because I have had several local hams tell me if wouldn’t work. So I built it just to prove a point.
So come to find out it works awesome. Talking simplex 20miles fairly easy. Almost as good as my jpole at 35ft.
Take care Walt K4YAG 73
Awesome! 73, Walt
👍All good advice, thanks. Have made a few antennas like this and they work. I found that I tended to have more repeatable results setting up pre-made 1/4 GP vertical antennas by raising the radials off the ground. I raised the bottom of the vertical element by 1 or 2 metres with the radial ends sloping down to insulated tent pegs.
Thanks Steve, I’ll experiment and give that a try
Cheers Walt, great video we call those fishing poles Roach poles in the UK, using one at the moment sticking out of the balcony of my flat, cheap and cheerful dose the job for me.
“Roach Pole” thanks for the info! That’s awesome Adam!
Great video, and definitely inspiring!! I'll be getting my 891 soon but have already ordered/received my Coffee and Ham Radio Apollo EFHW, which I'm looking forward to building. And now I have another few projects after that one. All of these are perfect for the field type stuff that interests me, and even save me a few bucks that I can spend on an antenna analyzer, tuner, and miscellaneous adapters to make it all work together. Thanks as always!!
Thanks! Have fun with your 891!
I'm about to set up my HF ham station and this video will help me tremendously as I was really looking for something cheap and portable as an antenna. Many thanks.
Thanks and have fun!
What a kickass low Cost Antenna Setup. Good job on that, UW. The foxtrott Contest was the Reason for me not to go portable DX and instead taking Bumble Bee out for a Ride. Happy Sunday into Poland. 73 de YFUG 💯🙋♂
Thanks Uncle G! Yes that contest drove me crazy! 73 my friend!
General class, grid EN72jj. Rig is Yaesu FT840 into long wire Windom at 30feet. Recent ice storm here took down my antennas, waiting for weather to warm up to put them back up. Nice video...simple, easy and to the point. I use an MFJ 948 antenna tuner for various bands...73 OM
Thanks for watching and commenting. 73 OM
Great work Walt!
Thanks for the great video!
I’ve used garden wire the same!
73, and God bless!
G7EDZ!
Cheap as chips! :)
I like that beach umbrella holder, I've never seen them before. Cheers Walt.🍻
Thanks! I’m sure you can find them there, you Aussies have all the cool beach toys! 😂
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES I'm 2hrs from the nearest beach so that may be why. Lol
I'll be looking it up online though.🍻🏖
France and Wales from Arizona today on 15m with 85w and a vertical. Fun! just discoverd your channel after hearing you on Callums live stream today. 73 de KI7MJU
Thanks for dropping by the channel!!! 73 de K4OGO
one can have a lot of fun and learn much with a spool of speaker wire. I had an end-fed ( with one of my homemade 9:1 UNUNs) up for almost a decade that was made with el-cheap-o stranded speaker wire - it was the really thin stuff ( prob. old Radio Shack stuff) too! it was around 60 feet on the element and the counterpoise was a ground stake and also my gutter and downspout . the thing worked better than I could believe ! , ( other one was a ladder line doublet) the end-fed was an inverted L config. so it had about 35' vertical and then flat across the top. it finally broke from an ice storm, so I simply built another ( better quality speaker wire this time) . stranded speaker wire works best , plus it's easy to hide in plain sight ( especially once it oxidizes a little bit. so I agree - if you are a new ham or a old goat like me, get out and experiment .
Great comment! Thanks for sharing.
Just built a trusdx and built this antenna. Perfect swr. it was terrible untill I added 2 radials so I had 4 total. Thanks
Great! good luck and good DX!
Nicely done Walt!
Thank you!
Nice video Walt. Keep making those contacts over in Poland. Stay safe & 73!
Thank you so much! 73
I read about these bnc to banana connectors based antenna in the pooular baofeng book as well. There they suggest to make a pyramid directional anntenna. I am yet to try though. Your approach looks much less effort though. Thanks Best 73
Very cool. I'm going to make one right away.
Awesome video Sir! Thank you!
Thank you!!!
Nice review, love building at hoc antennas
Thanks!
Thanks Walter. 👍New project for next weekend.
Thanks for watching Laszio!
Built it testerday with a 1:1 balun from Ham Goodies and only 2 counterpoise wires, Tunes in with my Xeigu G90 on 80 -10 m bands easily with SWR at 1:1. Made a lot of QSO's accross the bands but sticking to mainly 40 and 20 as it works better than my juniot GR5V. Hoping to make more N America contacts with this low take-off job with 10w. Well pleased thanks. Doug MM7DSA
Thanks Doug!
I wish you had a more clear picture of exactly how you connect or wind all the wires (antenna, ground) to the bnc before covering it up with tape. And wish you could show how you attach the balun too for us newbies.
Hi, I've been asked this before so I did this video to show more detail. Hopefully this will help!: ruclips.net/video/xEYp9IHqdIM/видео.htmlsi=J_nc2mUvYnLKOrEI
The red connector goes to the antenna wire, but what is the black one connected to? Is that just going to the ground jacketing of the coax cable going up to that connector, or is it even connected to anything? Maybe it's a silly question, but was a bit unclear here . . .
Good question, the counterpoise wires are connected to the black connector which is essentially connected to the coax jacket.
The black is to earth ground need something to drive into ground about 12 inches or so
@@jimmieblue6262 no, you're confusing earth ground with RF ground. They are two different things. This antenna has no earth ground and doesn't require anything driven into the ground.
I’ve been using a random wire for SOTA but this looks like a fun alternative. Will give it a shot.
Awesome, good luck Jeff!
I found your channel and yes, you have inspired me to try making a vertical antenna. The Rybakof antenna is the one I have chosen to make. It's the end of November, and I hope to get it on the air December 2, and work 40, 20, 15, & 10 meters... Thanks for the tips, 73's de kd5smf
Thanks for watching and commenting! Good luck with that antenna! 73, Walt
Hello! Great videos.
Can you use a metal pole?
Could you put the fiberglass pole on top of a metal pole?
Meaning, "getting it way up there".
My metal pole is sixteen feet long.
What would you recommend i do? Would i run my coax to the bottom of the fiberglass pole that will be installed on top of the metal pole?
Then, what about my ground wires?
Or is this just a bad idea?
Thanks so much for your time
Thanks! The metal pole is going to probably cause some issues. The upper element may couple to it and cause issues. You’re really not getting much from the 16 feet of height and you are probably better off just building it on the ground.
The BNC binding posts are awesome and allow for some simple and effective antennas.
Yes they are!
Thanks for another helpful video, Walt. Very useful info and the two you did on the Rybakov were especially so. I’ve copied your antenna drawings but don’t do Facebook. Are you no longer going to include these drawings in your YT vids? Thanks and 73.
Hi Lawrence, yes I will include my drawings for sure in the future.
Heard you in Denmark, on 40m on your 20m vertical, last night, so it does bring you abit around :) 👍
Haha thanks for the report!!!!
Great video, mate. Just one question about the counterpoise matter. Do we still need them if our setup is next to the sea ?
Thanks, I just use one counterpoise next to the sea.
Thanks a lot, just what I needed for inspiration!
Thanks for watching!
me too inspiration thanks
Thanks a lot. I never thought to do this with new spiderbeam, but I'm getting on this by my campout this weekend. I needed a proper side project like this to take my mind off of the collection of hamsticks I've been dealing with hihi. love and respect
Hey thanks WALT you are a BIG guy. I mean that as a compliment! Not talking about your body, haha! I loved your Favorite Antennas video, it got me yearning, striving, and acting! I have only watched a third of this video but I wonder why you need three antennas with each covering two bands. A doublet fed with ladder line to balun and tuner gives many bands. Ok I will keep watching now, not meaning to criticize just wondering. Keep going and having fun and sharing! Thanks!
you have inspired me . Canterbury uk 26 EY 109 thank you for being real❤
Thank you! 73 my friend
Thank you for the Great Video ... gonna give this a try first...
Nice All the Way Around !!!👏🏻👍🏻
Thanks 👍
Excellent video Walt. Can i make one suggestion to simplify set up? You can secure top end of wire to pole with a simple hitch, and just wind twice or thrice around the length of the pole. No taping required. Makes set up and take down much quicker and easier.
Keep up the great work!
73 M3KXZ
Great idea, thanks!
You make the most informative ham radio videos! Lots of poles and beach umbrella holders online. Which are the ones you ere using in the video? Thanks! Al
Thanks!
Available on Amazon, here’s the poles:
Goture//Telescopic Tenkara Fishing Rod//Ultralight Travel Fishing Rod,Portable Collapsible Bass Crappie Rod,1 Piece Carbon Fiber Inshore Stream Trout Pole 10 12 15 18 21 24 Free Tip Set(Top 3 Segment) a.co/d/0Q8APOl
Here’s the beach umbrella holders:
Beach Umbrella Anchor Sand Auger and Fishing Pole Sand Anchor by JGR Copa (Blue) a.co/d/djZxhnF
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Thanks! Just ordered them! ;)
Good video, playing with antennas is one of the most interesting aspects of Ham Radio👍❗️73 KV5P
Thanks Mike! Yes it’s my favorite part of the hobby.
Nice video, sir. Thank you very much.👍
Thank you too!
You mention a 1:1 balun but I don't see it in the closeup. Also, you showed a plan document for this. Is that available?
I was taught in the Army for quarter wave you do 234 ÷ freq (MHz) = length in feet
I realized that my QTH is just 360km from Slupsk in SM1 land, but I run mostly FT8. However I have built some antennas myself, so experimenting is good. Electric fence alu wire is actually pretty nice from a weight perspective, but it's quite stiff. The transit to copper is also suspect to electrochemical issues.
Oh wow, that’s cool. I miss Poland
Great Video 5 Stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Thanks so much!
TY for posting. KI7JRA in Arizona 🌵☀️🌵
Thanks for watching! 73 de K4OGO
Greetings from Poland :)
Greetings!!!!!!
Thanks for this great idea and video. Just what I'm looking for when will be in Iceland end of June. Not many trees to put up a dipole or efhw. Does a carbon fiber pole effect the performance? 73 Hope to catch you on 10 m while you're over there.
Hi John, no I’ve never had an issue with the carbon fiber pole. Hope to work you in Iceland!
Yup, verticals work great and they are SO easy! Good video!
Yes! Thank you!
Hello sir. Totally new Ham general here looking at the G90 for home and portable use. Want to build one of these at the house and a setup for portable. But being new I couldn’t tell. Is the speaker wire coming off the pole hooked to the red connector and the radials to the black? And then just a coax from the connector to the radio? What’s the part that you recommend but not required do? Thanks I’m advance. You saved my mind from going insane researching antennas!! 73 from Maryland. KC3VWP
Hi Wayne, yes the upper driven element to positive red and radials to black ground. Look for a 1:1 balun to use as a choke in the coax line, it keeps common mode energy from coming up the coax line and making the coax also act as part of the radiated antenna.
Ok. Another question. Is an adapter needed to go from the BNC to RG58?
@@waynerichter3190 I actually use RG8X although RG58 will work as well. I usually by it premade with BNC ends. One thing I highly recommend is purchasing some BNC to SO-239 adapters if you are going to experiment and build different antennas and use different radios.
Stupid question. When trimming a antenna, what part of the frequency allocation do you try to cut at? The center? Example: build 20m EFHW for extra phone portion, would you cut to length for 14.250? Does it really matter as long as you’re within the allocation? Thank you!
I’ve found that as long as you are somewhat near the center of the portion you want to use, you’re fine. I cut my 20m antennas for 14.240 and work the entire phone portion. 73, Walt
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES thank you, that’s what I thought. Gonna give antenna building a try!
I cut my wire antennas for phone and add a small female connector to the end. I have a variety of different length duplicate tails that I can plug in to give me resonance on the digi or cw portion of the band.
I love the ad that displays on your phone screen @ 2:03:
"This is not an ad but an act of desperation because Google doesn't index my website" 😂
haha I didn't even notice it
Good Day Walt. You could call this video; "How To Save $400 ! Of all the antenna videos that I have seen, this, is the most intelligent. Ham radio comments/instructions/how-to, etc. is like reading the bible. Thousands of pages of superfluous bunk with a little actual useful and understandable information.
You are Excellent. I just found you today and subscribed.
Thank You & Best Regards.
Thank you so very much for the kind words! 73, Walt
Simple antennas work pretty well. With that 20w Xiegu and your various simple antennas, have you been able to work back home to the U.S. from Poland?
Yes I’ve worked the states from here on 20, 15 and 10 but I think my best contacts from here are my long path QSOs to Australia. I have 3 in the log from here to VK. I was pretty stoked when that happened.
yes speaker wire fabulous however be wary the wire breaks quite easily as i have experienced 1st hand i no longer use but admit i was really excited with the cheap price of the wire just do not pull on it too much great video thanks Walt
Thanks! 73
Half-wave: 468 / fMHz = length in feet (use 234 for quarter-wave)
Great idea
Thanks!
G’day Walt. Have you thought about using your other pole to create a reflector and make your vertical directional with a bit of gain. Like the video. Cheers
Lance, I actually have plans to build a 10 meter vertical like that with the two poles while I'm here! Cheers
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Hope to see a video on it. Would be interesting if you could compare signal strength with and without. 👍🏼
@@LanceVK6LK_AussieHam will do, I’ve actually been researching this and keep getting information that says a director is more efficient than a reflector when using only 2 elements. I’m thinking about trying to measure that as well.
Very inspiring ! thanks 🙂
Thanks for watching!
Hello! I just ordered the 21’ pole did you remove the 2 very thin telescopic pieces from the top? Or just leave them? I’m afraid that I’ll break it! But I saw someone say that it was possible to remove some of the telescopic pieces by opening the end cap up. And do I need an antenna tuner for a 20 meter wire? Thank you!
I actually left the thin pieces and have actually taped wire to them (my Rybakov video). Yes you can take them out though the bottom when the pole is not extended.
...& u talking abt how easy it is to put up a vertical, makes me wanna go outside & make one, to make ANOTHER antenna (that I really don't need) but still wanna try, hi hi! 73 de WA4ELW in TN 🇺🇸 dit dit 😃
haha I want to build every antenna I don't need too!
The black goes to the radials Charles. Red is radiator, black is ground radials.
great job
Thank you!
I got a similar idea while calling CQ at a POTA this morning. Mine will involve soldering and 3D printed parts though. Why keep it simple when you can overengineer it?
Hahahahaha that sounds like the guys I work with!
Hi Walt thanks for the video! I also have a question, if you were to place one of these antennas on a flatish roof and tied to a cement chiminey do you think the SWR would be acceptable and would it extend the DX distance?
If that flattish roof is metal I’m absolutely positive it will work wonders. I have a No Radial Vertical at my home QTH over a flat metal roof and it does really well. As for the chimney to be honest I’m not really sure but it’s worth a try to find out. I would definitely try it.
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Thank you Walt i will try as soon as the snow melts off my roof!
Hey Walt, this is very cool. Would this work if I hung the vertical element up in a tree and had it run down the trunk? Essentially using the main part of the tree as a "mast"? I've read that you can get RF issues if the wire is touching too much of the tree.
ur right, I wudn't want it too close to, or even near, a tree trunk; so since I really don't have the room for a ground-mounted vertical (as shown in the great video), I instead made a wire vertical & with a light rope, tossed it over a higher tree limb, with the lower, radiating end tied, or weighted down, near ground level at first (to be able to put it together!); then I attached what were to become elevated radials, making sure they'd be high enough off the ground to walk under; then I simply tied them off in different directions to various trees, using a bungee cord at the end of each radial AND over the high tree limb, so as to give the antenna & radials a bit of "wiggle room," to be better able to handle any storms &/or high winds that occasionally pass thru (& it works great)! GL de WA4ELW in TN 🇺🇸 dit dit 😃
I think it would work but you might have some issues, it depends on the size of the tree. As I always say "there's only one way to find out" give it a try!
If I wanted to, could I find a multiple holder so that I could have all three (or more) bands up and connected to the banana clip? I know that the RF would use the most resonate antenna, but would it have interfenence between the other masts?
No it would work, you’re basically describing the principle of the DX Commander antenna
Very good review, thank you. I am very new to radio and I have a couple questions. Can you use 3 or 4 different lengths of wire on a single pole and tie the ends together and make a single connection to the radio? Also, can you bury the ground plane wires a few inches under ground so the grass can be cut without removing them? Thank you in advance for any information you can pass along.
Hi Greg, yes you can use all three driven elements together but you will need some sort of spreader to space the wires apart. What you’re describing is done with a DX Commander antenna, take a look into that antenna. As for burying the counterpoise wires you really can’t let them go too deep. Some people use something similar to a staple to get the wires tight into the ground and the grass grows over them. The wires need to be just on the surface. Counterpoise wires are the RF ground to the antenna which is different than earth ground that’s driven into the ground. Think of a candle sitting on a mirror and the light reflecting, RF ground is similar, the wire on the ground is interacting with the vertical driven element wire. 73, Walt
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Thank you for the very quick reply and for the info. I will check out the recommendations you made. I am starting with just being a listener but eventually will seek my HAM license. Again, thanks for the help.
Walt, your explanation of a candle’s light reflecting off a mirror is so apt. Such a simple concept of RF but truly helpful for many I am sure. Still using the Rybakov. Gangbusters!
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES Old welding rods that are no long good for use can be bent to make ground staples. I had a bad box of rods, 50 pounds should do it! Heavy wire cores should be long enough for two. Check with a welding shop.
Hi Walter!
This video just popped up for me today and glad it did. Liked & subscribed.
Great tips and fun video. Also went back and reviewed & liked a couple other videos - great content!
73,
John - KK7JBZ
Thanks so much John!
73, Walt K4OGO
It’s great fun, messing with wires.🤪
Trying a 5/8 for 15m, as im a Mountain HAM that low angle of radiation should make great DX.
Thanks for your great work 73 de HB3XBL 👍🇨🇭
That 5/8 should be amazing in the mountains! All the best and good DX! 73 de K4OGO
I’d like to know more about the 1:1 set up
It’s a small choke I got from N9SAB. He sells them on eBay (Timotiz) and Etsy
Great video juste another question how have you build your choke balun?
Thanks, my balun was built by my friend Tim N9SAB. He sells them in his eBay store: www.ebay.com/str/n9sab
@@COASTALWAVESWIRES I go to see that, thanks.