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Detailed entries for one subject from the INDEX TO HOW TO DO IT INFORMATION.
Click on a see also (sa) or tracing (xx) to view detailed entries about a related subject.
The entries are in alphabetical order by magazine name and then in chronological sequence.
To obtain a copy of any magazine article contact your local public library or the publisher.

ANTENNA -- 160 METER
xx   ANTENNA

160 meter dipole matching. An analysis of why certain 160 meter dipoles are difficult to match and tune. Curing high-power antenna tuning arcing.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1990 (v.46#4) pg. 46

The HGW (hot guy wire) beam antenna for 80 or 160 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1994 (v.50#11) pg. 120
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1995 (v.51#3) pg. 72

A small, simple 160 meter ferrite rod loop antenna for low noise reception.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1995 (v.51#3) pg. 70

Antenna performance and 160 meters. Advice on antenna height, style of antenna, inverted L antenna, etc.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1995 (v.51#3) pg. 80

A simple adapter for a G5RV antenna that will allow 160 meter operation. The adapter must be removed in order to operate the other bands.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1995 (v.51#8) pg. 46

Small antennas for 160 meters. Designs include compress full-wave loop, short dipole, helically wound short vertical, top-band vertical, inverted L, and random-length wires.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1996 (v.52#2) pg. 52

How to build a simple 160 meter antenna that will also do a fine job on 80, 40, and 30 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1996 (v.52#4) pg. 26

Compact 160 meter vertical.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1996 (v.52#4) pg. 52

A minimum-space wire vertical for 75- and 160-meters is 60-ft. long.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1996 (v.52#6) pg. 72

How to make a 160 meter quarter-wave sloper antenna.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1996 (v.52#10) pg. 34

The box antenna. A new high-gain, two-element, vertical parasitic array for the low bands. Uses no loading coils. Dimensions given for 75, 80, and 160 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1997 (v.53#1) pg. 9
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1997 (v.53#6) pg. 26 (Switchable bi-directional modification)

The 160 meter upside-down antenna. A quarter-wavelength sloper wire antenna with the feed and high-current point at the top and loading at the bottom.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1997 (v.53#3) pg. 24

Build a short, two-band vertical antenna for 160 and 80 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1997 (v.53#4) pg. 20

Folded-T flat top limited space antenna for 160 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1997 (v.53#8) pg. 85

A balloon-lifted full-wave antenna for 160 meters. Using two helium-filled balloons to hold aloft an inverted-L antenna over 500 feet long.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1998 (v.54#8) pg. 38

A remotely tuned 160 meter inverted-L antenna. Can be adapted for 30 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1998 (v.54#11) pg. 28

160-meter antenna suggestion and operating hints for effective top-banding in the wild. Features an inverted L antenna with a total length of 133-ft.
DX MAGAZINE Aug 1990 (v.2#8) pg. 12

An antenna for DX'ing the low-frequency bands (160, 75/80, and 40 meters) is made from 16-ft of thick-walled PVC pipe.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Nov 1992 (v.9#11) pg. 78