[Elecraft] [k3] Isotropic Antenna

Doug Person k0dxv at aol.com
Sat Apr 9 10:17:15 EDT 2016


The issue was June 1998.  The article was focused on how to construct 
one.  73 (Wayne Green) wasn't interested in all the tables of 
performance data.  He also wasn't interested in an excellent interview I 
did with Wayne and Eric early on.  In so many words he was pretty clear 
that unless Elecraft was going to be a regular advertiser, he wasn't 
going to devote space to promoting what was essentially a startup at the 
time.  Poor judgement on his part.  I think Wayne Green perfectly 
defined the term curmudgeon.

Doug -- K0DXV

On 4/8/2016 10:13 PM, Walter Underwood wrote:
> The archives for 73 Magazine are online, so if you remember when, folks could read the article.
>
> https://archive.org/details/73-magazine <https://archive.org/details/73-magazine>
>
> wunder
> K6WRU
> Walter Underwood
> CM87wj
> http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)
>
>> On Apr 8, 2016, at 8:05 PM, Doug Person via Elecraft <elecraft at mailman.qth.net> wrote:
>>
>> I wrote an article for 73 many years ago where I effectively remade the Isotron antenna with parts from Home Depot.  At the time, a 20 meter version could be built for about $15.  I tested my version extensively and for the most part a dipole made with two Hamsticks was quite superior.
>>
>> They resonate, have good SWR bandwidth and generally radiate 5 watts of the 100 watts that goes into them. A "magnetic loop" blows it away.  I sold the sample Isotron I bought at a hamfest for $5. (Bottom line - they are, as we say in the software business, crapware)
>>
>> Doug -- K0DXV
>>
>> On 4/7/2016 5:12 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
>>> This so-called "antenna" is at best dumb, and at worst a rip-off. As master antenna-designer N6BT wrote some years ago, "everything 'works,' even a light bulb." He demonstrated this by mounting a a light bulb on a wooden fencepost, feeding with coax that he had carefully choked so that the coax could not radiate, and working all continents with it.
>>>
>>> As others have noted, antennas like magnetic loops, loaded whips (HamSticks, etc.), and long wires are the weapons of choice with limited space and/or requirements of minimal visibility. If the frame of the building is non-metallic, indoor antennas can work (but can also be mondo noisy on RX). If the frame is metallic, the antenna must be outside. The good news is that the building frame will work fine as a counterpoise (although it may block the antenna in the direction of the building).  A long wire launched away from the building is best -- small diameter enameled wire can be hard to see, and works fine as an antenna.
>>>
>>> 73, Jim K9YC
>>>
>>> On Thu,4/7/2016 2:41 AM, Petr, OK1RP/M0SIS wrote:
>>>> I am sure that David talked about an Isotron antennas like this:
>>>> https://www.isotronantennas.com/
>>>>
>>>> I intensively tested/used this antenna in 90's on 40m (product from Sigi,
>>>> DK9FN) and I have to say it is a nightmare in overall. From my own
>>>> experiences the performance of this toy was highly dependent to the
>>>> grounding availability, bandwidth was very small and tunning was influenced
>>>> by ground only but also by closed objects a lot.
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