<DIV style="font-family:Arial, sans-serif; font-size:10pt;">From: Richard Kern via Harc <harc@humboldt-arc.org><BR>To: HARC <harc@humboldt-arc.org><BR>Cc: Richard Kern@reninet.com><BR><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>I need some assistance with a 2-meter home made dipole.</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV><DIV>I returned by Btech dual band transceiver to the seller because it
stopped transmitting. They've did the repair/replacement and sent it back, telling me I killed my
first one with an antenna that was out of tune.</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>According
to my NanoVNA, it's under 1.5 swr throughout the 144-148 range in which I
operate. I did one 10 second transmit on the 444, but it did still work
after that, at least for a while.</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>So:</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>if my vna is accurate, the antenna should be fine on 2 meters. <BR></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>My
concern is that when it is measured, it seems too short compared to the calculations. Is it normal for a dipole to be
about 80% of 1/2 wavelength? It's copper wire, probably 14 gauge. I was expecting 90-95% of simple wavelength calculation. I haven't found anything in the literature concerning how much to trim, other than "a little at a time until it's swr is minimum for your frequencies). <BR></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>I don't want to hook it back up if I'm operating on bad data (from vna).</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>Do any of you have a home-made, confirmed in-tune 2-meter antenna? If so, what is it made of and what are the lengths of the elements?<BR></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV>I welcome suggestions.<DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>Richard<BR></DIV><DIV>kn6fxk<BR><BR></DIV></DIV>
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