Is that a UHF/VHF antenna on top of your beam?Your never safe, we are always listening!![]()
Is that a UHF/VHF antenna on top of your beam?Your never safe, we are always listening!![]()
Is that a UHF/VHF antenna on top of your beam?
Much activity on 6 meters in your area?
Military writing to cut down on any confusion between letters & numbers. A 7 with a line in it distinguishes it from a 5 or (in some cases) a 4.
Or a 1. I was a math major in college and have sloppy handwriting, I would always slash my 7's. I also slash z to distinguish it from 2. When you're writing out formulas you have to distinguish 1 from I and l so you have to put a "hat" on it, then you need to distinguish it from 7. You also have to distinguish 2 from z, 6 from b and beta. Kids today have word processors that makes it all easy. Although I can't imagine solving equations using anything other than pencil and paper.
And umlauts. :laughing:
Ahh ok G6 I think I have one of them in the garage rafters need to haul it out and try it i guess would be a good antenna for the RMS station I suppose currently using an Isopole! How long is the OCFD ? I just built a HWEF 134' with a 49:1 balun works great 80-10 no tuner as well as on my MARS freq!! We use the same MA5B at the EOC here but living on the coast it gets very hard on beams so far we have rebuilt the EOC beam twice now in 5 years. My 2 meter 13B2 seems to be the only one holding up in the constant wind!At the very top is an old Hustler G6 2 meter vertical. The "funny looking square" next down is a 6 meter Moxon. 2 element beam. Then next down is the MA5B Cushcraft beam for 20, 17, 15, 12 and 10 meters.
Below that is the 80 meter OCFD, useful on 80 thru 6 meters. Not shown is a 6 meter vertical, and out in the woods is an inverted L for 160 meters and useful on 60 and 30 meters as well with a tuner.