Santa managed to include in his delivery some of the materials that I needed to build my 160 meter inverted L antenna. You see, Steve Silverman, Pete Juliano and I have collectively more than 150 years in ham radio, but none of us have ever operated on Top Band. The three of us have taken A SOLEMN OATH to correct this horrendous deficiency. I am in the vanguard, partly due to a weather pattern that is perfect for antenna building.
Armed with a new elastic band for my Wrist-Rocket sling shot and some perfectly shaped lead sinkers, yesterday -- with the obvious cooperation of The Radio Gods -- I managed to get two ropes over some 70 foot trees. Soon -- with minimal gnashing of teeth -- I had 185 feet of wire in the air.
This morning I was messing around with L networks at the base of the antenna. I took a coffee break, leaving the 185 foot wire and the ground system connected to the coax. I had the transmitter off, so I was surprised to see the SWR meter jumping around a bit, up significantly from zero. What could that be? It wasn't coming from my station, so it had to be coming from some other transmitter. And the slight bit of jumping that I saw on the SWR meter had the familiar pattern of the human voice. Some radio sleuthing ensued.
I flipped the station antenna switch to the "bench" position, and connected my scope to the coax. Wow! I immediately saw a big strong AM signal with modulation, at about 5 or 6 volts peak to peak. The Rigol 'scope gave the frequency: 1220 kHz.
I tuned the HQ-100 to that frequency. As I listened to Gospel broadcast, I could follow the voice peaks on the 'scope.
Some Googling ID's the station: WFAX 1220 AM. 5 kilowatts in the daytime. 1.5 miles from my house. The vertical portion of the inverted L is obviously picking up a LOT of energy from the WFAX tower. And the horizontal portion of my antenna is broadside to the WFAX tower.
Of course this all made me think about throwing together a crystal radio, but then I realized I'd already listened to WFAX with simple diode -- the one in my SWR meter. That little SWR meter was acting like a crystal radio with a visual output!
January 11, 2025. Time for a project
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With a temporary lull while we await the next power shutdown it is time to
ponder new projects. But 1st is to finish the tube final for the Hybrid rig.
As ...
40 minutes ago