And again the weather was fine today. Lots of sun and a reasonable temperature. Good for antenna work.
As I wrote before this experiment has a different approach. I use thicker isolated wire and make a real halo instead of using "speakerwire" which is not really weather resistant. To the left you can see the feedpoint with the Diamond BU50 1:1 balun.
After experimenting for over an hour I decided to drop the 12m part of the antenna. Whatever I did I could not get 12m right. It doesn't really matter I can also use 12m on my Gainmaster 1/2 wave 11m antenna with the internal tuner from the radio. And it does at least as good as a 12m band halo. The 17m halo was too short so I made it 40cm longer and that was a good choice. 17m is excellent now.
I made everything as ugly as possible, since ugly antennas work the best :-)
Not to forget this is the open side of the halo on the picture at the right. It is most important because this is were you can tune the antenna. The problem is that if you tune one halo others will change as well. It takes a lot of time to get things right. While tuning I kept the change of resonance point, when mounting it high on the tower, in mind. It expected it to shift upwards and I wrote about it in previous posts. I wrote down the most ideal "best" frequencies and tuned the antenna on lower frequencies for compensation.
The nice and easy thing is that, instead of folding back the end of the loops, tuning can be done by changing the angle of the halo ends.
Steeper angle at the end: resonsance frequency shifts down.
Not such a steep angle: resonance frequency shifts up.
Depending on band the change can be 100-200 Khz.
The results on the ground before mounting it in the tower again:
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