I have always admired the Butternut vertical
antennae. They are very well built, using good quality
"doorknob" capacitors, and nice airwound low-loss
coils. Having had an "HF2" for a while, I decided
to see if I could make a homebrew "improved"..??
version.
The HF2, is about 30ft long, and has an L/C
band switching arrangement near the base. This L/C circuit
consists of two coils in series, and a "doorknob"
capacitor in parallel with the lower, larger coil. I'm
reluctant to call this L/C arrangement a "trap", as
it appears to operate in a different manner to the
"traps" we see in antennae like the W3DZZ. If my
analysis is correct, it appears to work in the following
manner
On 80m, the RF "sees" the
capacitor as an high impedance path, and so it takes the path
through the two coils in series, and on into the top part of
the vertical. It is therefore, a 1/8th w/l
vertical on 80m, brought to 1/4 w/l resonance by the (mostly)
base loading coils.
On 40m, the RF "sees" the lower
coil as the high impedance path, and so goes via the
capacitor to the upper coil, and on to the rest of the
vertical. Because of the "shortening" effect of the
series capacitor, the upper coil is required to bring the
antenna back to 1/4 w/l resonance.
The ideal vertical is full sized, and
standing over a perfect ground. Alas, we live in an imperfect
World, with many compromises forced upon us.. We can,
however, look at these compromises, and use our ingenuity to
improve things a little.
My rationale for the design of the
homebrewed version of the HF2 was as follows .
A full sized 80m vertical is 68ft
approx .Out of the question at my QTH.. BUT..!! I could
safely go as high as 40 or 45ft using available materials. So
what would an extra 15ft of height do for me ?? Well,
first and foremost, it should get rid of the 40m coil
completely, and also a large chunk of the 80m coil as well,
thus bringing the coil losses down to a much more acceptable
level. It would also improve the bandwidth on 80m.
Another improvement, would be to move the
L/C assembly higher up the vertical, further reducing coil
losses (less current flowing in the coil). I moved it up
about 6ft, which doesn't do much for coil losses, but puts
the assembly at a good height for adjustments.
Construction..
A quick examination of " ye olde
junkbox" produced a few odd lengths of 1 1/2 ins OD
aluminium tubing. A number of glass fibre tapered rods A
large coil of aluminium wire, about 4mm diameter A few
odd bits of aluminium sheeting about 1mm thick numerous
jubilee clips (hoseclips/muffler clamps) A number of
nice ex WW2 capacitors (from an old TU5B I
think Remember them??)..
I chose a 6ft length of 1 1/2ins OD
aluminum tube for the bottom of the vertical. This would get
the L/C assembly higher up the vertical, but it would still
be low enough to reach the hoseclips for making adjustments.
I then found a piece of timber dowelling
which was a nice tight fit in the tubing. I then got a piece
of glass fibre tube, about 3 inches long which fitted over
the dowel. I centred this tubing on the dowel, having first
coated the dowel with glass fibre resin "goo"..
When the resin dried, I had a nice strong, waterproof, and
hopefully, RF proof insulator..
The next step was to push one end of the
dowel into the 6ft length of aluminium tube, and the other
end into another length of aluminium tube about 18 ft long. I
then got a glassfibre tapered tube (one of my store of Quad
arms) and ran aluminium wire up through it, and out the top a
further foot or so.
I drilled a hole at the top of the 18ft
aluminium tube, ran the bottom of the aluminium wire through
the hole (from the inside out), and clamped it to the
aluminium tube with a hoseclamp.. I then connected the
glassfibre tube to the top of the aluminum tube. I now had an
edifice that would stand just over 40ft high.
I wound a coil of about 24 turns, using a
plastic rainwater down spout as a coil former (about 4ins
diameter) , and slipped it over the vertical. I tapped the
coil about 8 turns back from one end, and assembled the whole
shebang as shown in the following drawing and photo... They
say a picture is worth more than a thousand words.....Sooo!!!
I got a pair of capacitors which were
marked as being 100pf each. I mounted these in parallel as
shown in the pics.When I measured their value using the MFJ
SWR analyser, the value at 3.6mHz was 250pf. Having got the
antenna raised to the vertical position, I guyed it with
three lengths of nylon twine.
I next connected my trusty MFJ SWR
analyser, and the battle commenced. By tapping the coils with
the fly leads, and moving the hoseclips up and down , to
stretch, or compress the coils , I eventually got resonance
on 80m and 40m.The SWR was about 1.5:1 on 80m, and a bit
better on 40m.
This L/C assembly should cope very well
with whatever overall length that you find convenient. Mine
certainly coped well with lengths varying between 25ft and
40ft. When I built the final version of 40ft overall. The top
coil was redundant, and the bottom coil was smaller as well.
My ground plane consists of 32 lengths of
wire, 60ft each, and another 4 lengths of about 120 ft each .
These are buried about 2ins deep in the lawn. I am situated
on the side of a hill, about 175ft ASL. The sea is about 1
mile away, and on three sides of the QTH. This is a very good
site for radio, and this vertical has worked a lot of DX for
me.
Cheap and cheerfull
160M addition
I also fired it up on 160M, using a thirty
turn, 4inch diameter coil, in parallel with a 400pf capacitor
mounted below the 80M coil. It worked as well as one might
expect under the circumstances, but was very narrow-banded,
and not very efficient. I found a big improvment in
performance by using the HF2 as a support for a 160M inverted
L.. I used a 400pf capacitor at the feed point of the
antenna, in series with about 140ft of wire, rigged as shown
in the drawing. I pruned the wire length until it was
resonant on the desired frequency.
The other option would be to use a fixed
wire length, and a 500pf variable capacitor. This would allow
you to tune anywhere in the band.