[Lowfer] Lowfer TAG
jrusgrove at comcast.net
jrusgrove at comcast.net
Fri Oct 6 12:58:14 EDT 2023
John
After a number of checks this week
I'd have to agree that TAG is way down from it's usual signal strength.
Jay W1VD
----- Original Message -----
From: John Andrews <w1tag at charter.net>
Reply-To: Discussion of the Lowfer \(US, European, & UK\) and MedFer bands
<lowfer at mailman.qth.net>
To: Discussion of the Lowfer (US, European, &, UK) and MedFer bands
<lowfer at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: 10/1/2023 7:39:04 PM
Subject: Re: [Lowfer] Lowfer TAG
Thanks for the reports.
I'm seeing a fairly lousy signal in MA at 130
miles, worse than last year, despite the same antenna and a little more
antenna current.
I've
been pondering a theory in the last year or so. There are two
differences between Bill
Ashlock's loops and mine. One, he experimented
with copper tubing/piping as a conductor, and some of those versions
were likely better than my RG-8 shield conductor. I have no reliable
memory of which combinations produced what, but his signal was at worst
much better than what I've
gotten from the TAG loop in Maine. Two, he
had some oaks and maples nearby, not all pines the way I have at the TAG
QTH in Maine. On that second theme, my experience with xmit loops at the
Massachusetts QTH was pretty good, and
it's all oak trees there, no pines.
Continuing to pine away... This has been an unusual year for the 100
foot plus pine trees at the TAG site. We have had a massive pine pitch
problem at ground level, especially in the unusually warm period in
early to mid September. The stuff got all over everything. It's
been bad
before, but never like that. The trees also have massive loads of pine
cones at their tops. Some have come down already, but
it's early for big
drops unless the wind gets really wild.
Note that an older version of the TAG loop was supported on one end by a
very big Poplar tree. That tree had to be removed maybe 5 years ago, and
I have since had to rely more on pines.
So I'm
wondering about the effect of an unusual amount of pine sap in
those trees this year. I suspect the stuff must be a disaster as a
dielectric. Maybe I'll make some measurements. Could those big, lossy
conductors holding up and standing near the loop keep the various
e-fields from forming?
Interesting stuff.
John, W1TAG
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