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Subject:
From:
Richard Fiorello <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
For blind ham radio operators <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:09:20 -0500
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text/plain
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Hi;
I think you are winning the prize.  Getting those 32 foot radials in 
that small a space is quite an accomplishment.  I have an hf9v on the 
roof but the swr is terrible and there seems to be a problem in the feed 
line so for the moment it is receive only.

richard

On 1/12/2012 5:33 PM, David Simpson wrote:
>        I don't know if I'm the person on this list with the smallest yard,
> but I may be. It's a 20 by 24 foot backyard with a shed at the back end and
> power lines running along the back of the house.
>
>        I put up a Butternut HF6V, six-band vertical and did my best with
> laying down a dozen radials. Of course, I had to bend some of them to fit
> the shape of the lot, and I could only fan them out in an arc about 270
> degrees, since I erected the vertical right next to the shed at the back of
> the yard, to avoid any possibility of it coming down on the power line.
>
>        Luckily, I put the radials down in the fall, after I was done cutting
> the grass for the season, and by spring, they were well down in the earth
> and grown over with the new grass.
>
>        Since I mow my yard with a small push mower, I sunk edging stones into
> the ground, leaving their scalloped edges about an inch above ground. These
> run along the two sides of the yard, about two feet from the edges of my
> property. I plant herbs and flowers in the two-foot swath and never have to
> worry about running over them, since the mower wheels hit the edging stones.
> I placed the vertical in this protected area, too, gathered all of the
> radials in a piece of PVC that's shaped like an elbow. The PVC nestles
> nicely in one of the scalloped grooves of an edging stone.
>
>        Although it was very helpful to have a sighted friend to help with all
> of this, I did a lot of the work, myself, and learned a lot from it.
>
>        The vertical has been up for about seven years now, and it works quite
> well on 40 through 10, and does less well on 80. It sure doesn't get me the
> precision of a beam, but for my situation, it's done fine.
>
>
>
> Dave W I 3 Y
>
>
>
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